Imperial Valley Press

3 sailors have COVID on US ship that saw outbreak last year

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WASHINGTON ( AP) — Three sailors aboard the USS Theodore Roosevelt have tested positive for COVID-19, the Navy said Monday, less than a year after a massive outbreak on the ship sidelined it in Guam for nearly two months.

The Navy said the three sailors have not had any symptoms, and they and others who were exposed to them are currently isolated on the aircraft carrier, which is conducting operations in the Pacific. They tested positive Sunday.

In a statement, the Navy said it is “following an aggressive mitigation strategy,” including masks, social distancing, and proper handwashin­g and hygiene measures.

“U. S. Pacific Fleet is committed to taking every measure possible to protect the health of our force,” the fleet said in the statement.

The outbreak on the ship last year was the largest the military has seen so far, with more than 1,000 sailors testing positive. One sailor died. Eventually all of the 4,800 crew members were sent ashore in Guam for weeks of quarantine, in a systematic progressio­n that kept enough sailors on the ship to keep it secure and running.

The failure of the ship’s leaders to properly handle the outbreak exploded into one of the biggest military leadership crises in recent years. The ship’s captain, who pleaded for faster action to protect his crew from the rapidly spreading virus, was fired and the one- star admiral on the ship had his promotion delayed.

Adm. Mike Gilday, the chief of naval operations, concluded after a lengthy review that both men made

serious errors in judgment.

The carrier returned to duty about three months after it docked in Guam and then returned home to the West Coast. Other ships that have been underway or at their home ports over the past year have had smaller numbers of sailors test positive, but none have had such a major outbreak.

The Roosevelt has been out on deployment in the Pacific in recent weeks, and about a week ago conducted dual carrier exercises with the USS Nimitz, which is returning home to the West Coast from a lengthy deployment in the Middle East.

TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) — After a weeklong bus ride from Honduras, Isabel Osorio Medina arrived in northern Mexico with the hope President Joe Biden would make it easier for people like him to get into the United States.

“It seems the new president wants to help migrants,” Osorio said as he got ready to check in to a cheap hotel in downtown Tijuana before heading to the U.S. “They’re saying he is going to help, but I don’t know for sure how much is true or not.”

The 63- year- old is among thousands of people who have come to the U. S.- Mexico border with the hope they will be able to ask for asylum and make their way into the U.S. now that former President Donald Trump is no longer in office.

While Biden has taken some major steps in his first weeks in office to reverse Trump’s hardline immigratio­n policies, his administra­tion hasn’t lifted some of the most significan­t barriers to asylum-seekers.

In fact, it’s discouragi­ng people from coming to the country, hoping to avoid what happened under both Trump and former President Barack Obama — border agents getting overwhelme­d by migrants, including many Central Americans with children.

“Now is not the time to come,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said at a recent briefing, “and the vast majority of people will be turned away.”

Secretary of State Antony Blinken struck a similar tone on Feb. 6 as he announced official steps to end Trump-era agreements with Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala that required many asylum-seekers to seek refuge in one of those countries instead of the U.S.

“To be clear, these actions do not mean that the U.S. border is open,” Blinken said. “While we are committed to expanding legal pathways for protection and opportunit­y here and in the region, the United States is a country with borders and laws that must be enforced.”

That message hasn’t reached everyone.

More people have been arriving at a encampment in Matamoros, Mexico, a dangerous city just south of the Texas border where hundreds of asylum-seekers have been waiting under Trump’s “Remain in Mexico” program.

It’s possible even more may come after the Biden administra­tion announced Friday that it would slowly allow an estimated 25,000 people to enter the U.S. as their cases are reviewed. The first wave is expected Feb. 19.

Walter Valenzuela, a 37- year- old Honduran, said he had been waiting in Tijuana, across the border from San Diego, for months for a chance to either seek asylum or risk an illegal crossing.

For years, asylum-seekers who met the initial

threshold of demonstrat­ing a “credible fear” of persecutio­n in their homeland could generally stay in the U.S. until an immigratio­n judge decided whether they qualified for permanent residency, which can take years.

Trump administra­tion officials believed many asylum claims were fraudulent or lacked merit, submitted by people simply looking to remain in the U.S. But the issue is murky as tens of thousands flee violent gangs, natural disasters and political upheaval.

The Biden administra­tion has signed several executive orders on immigratio­n, including allowing in more refugees and establishi­ng a task force to find the parents of about 600 children who were separated under Trump and still haven’t been reunited.

But it hasn’t ended a public health order Trump

issued at the start of the coronaviru­s pandemic that allows U.S. Customs and Border Protection to immediatel­y expel nearly everyone, including asylum-seekers.

Psaki said the government is still working to develop a “humane, comprehens­ive process” to evaluate people coming to the U.S.

“Asylum processes at the border will not occur immediatel­y,” she said. “It will take time to implement.”

Alan Bersin, who held top positions dealing with border security during the Clinton and Obama administra­tions, warned that Biden is headed for a crisis if he releases all asylum- seekers into the United States. That would invite fraud and abuse, he said.

“There’s such a pressing sense in the advocate community that is controllin­g the Biden immigratio­n agenda — they want to reverse all Trump actions,” he said.

Meanwhile, pressure is mounting.

The number of people apprehende­d at the border has increased since January, though it’s below some previous periods. Authoritie­s say many are getting caught and returned multiple times.

Complicati­ng matters, a law has taken effect in Mexico that prohibits holding children in migrant detention centers, and the U.S. has stopped sending back some families along parts of the border. CBP, which doesn’t have capacity to hold families because of COVID-19, in recent weeks has released dozens of people into the U.S. with instructio­ns to appear in court later.

Authoritie­s fear that as word spreads of those releases, more people will come. And asylum is not the only immigratio­n issue creating headwinds for Biden’s administra­tion.

Texas and Arizona have both sued to stop Biden’s 100-day deportatio­n moratorium, which a judge temporaril­y put on hold. Immigratio­n and Customs and Enforcemen­t officers are complainin­g about proposed rules to focus on detaining and removing people in the country illegally who pose national security threats or have been convicted of more serious crimes.

Jon Feere, a senior adviser to ICE under Trump, said such moves are part of a larger pattern that the Biden administra­tion will come to regret.

“When you send the message that you are not serious about immigratio­n enforcemen­t, you can’t act surprised when you see a massive influx of people that you have to manage,” he said.

Raul Ortiz, deputy chief of the Border Patrol, said last week that as a liaison to the Biden transition team, he found the staff to be “very attentive” to the issues. Some had experience with surges of asylum- seekers under Obama.

“This wasn’t uncharted waters,” Ortiz said in an interview produced by the Border Patrol. “It wasn’t like we were starting from scratch.”

The larger debate is lost on Osorio, who came to Tijuana because he heard Biden wants to help people like him.

He says he intended to seek asylum based on the dangers he faced as an environmen­tal activist protesting illegal logging in Honduras.

But because he can’t seek asylum at the official border crossing in San Diego, other migrants told him about a place he could try to cross illegally. He said if he encountere­d the Border Patrol, he would ask for asylum and see what happens.

“They already told us more or less how to do it,” Osorio said. “We’re going to take a look.”

 ?? BULL
AP PHOTO/GREGORY ?? In this July 9, 2020, file photo the USS Theodore Roosevelt aircraft carrier makes its way into San Diego Bay as seen from San Diego.
BULL AP PHOTO/GREGORY In this July 9, 2020, file photo the USS Theodore Roosevelt aircraft carrier makes its way into San Diego Bay as seen from San Diego.
 ?? AP PHOTO/EMILIO ESPEJEL ?? In this Sept. 13, 2019, file photo, Central American migrants wait to see if their number will be called to cross the border and apply for asylum in the United States, at the El Chaparral border crossing in Tijuana, Mexico.
AP PHOTO/EMILIO ESPEJEL In this Sept. 13, 2019, file photo, Central American migrants wait to see if their number will be called to cross the border and apply for asylum in the United States, at the El Chaparral border crossing in Tijuana, Mexico.

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