Los Angeles Times

Mexico’s COVID czar takes maskless beach vacation

The undersecre­tary of health, who has urged people to ‘ stay home,’ comes under fire.

- By Kate Linthicum Cecilia Sanchez in The Times’ Mexico City bureau contribute­d to this report.

MEXICO CITY — Every night, in a televised news conference, Mexico’s point man on COVID- 19 gives a somber update on the pandemic’s toll.

Hugo López- Gatell, the Mexican undersecre­tary of health, speaks of a scarcity of oxygen tanks, of hospitals near a breaking point and of healthcare workers who have died in numbers higher than anywhere else in the world.

Then he makes a dramatic plea, an appeal he has uttered so often and with such conviction that it has spurred internet memes and has even been remixed into a reggaetón song: “Stay home.”

So it struck a nerve for many in the nation when photograph­s emerged over the weekend showing López- Gatell relaxing on a sandy Pacific beach nearly 500 miles from his residence in Mexico City.

In one photo, he is seen seated at an outdoor bar with a female companion. Neither is wearing a mask. In a second photo, taken a few days earlier on a crowded f light from Mexico City to the beach resort in southern Oaxaca, López- Gatell is seen talking on a cellphone — again, no mask.

Now he’s among the club of public authoritie­s criticized for what some consider pandemic hypocrisy. Other officials caught for not practicing what they preach include California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who was scorned after attending a November birthday dinner at a Napa Valley restaurant, and Austin Mayor Steve Adler, who in November recorded a video urging his constituen­ts to not travel — while he was on a Mexican vacation in Cabo San Lucas.

López- Gatell, who apparently f lew to the beach on New Year’s Eve while on a short break from his nightly news conference, did not immediatel­y address the controvers­y.

Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador downplayed the bad optics.

“He has been working a lot, very hard,” López Obrador told reporters. “He is a very good public servant, a good specialist, a profession­al.”

But the beach photos have sparked anger in Mexico, where authoritie­s, including López- Gatell, have repeatedly demanded sacrif ice from citizens since the coronaviru­s began its spread.

In the usually bustling capital of Mexico City, nonessenti­al businesses have been ordered shuttered for weeks, leaving shopkeeper­s, waiters and other workers scrambling to pay rent in a country where unemployme­nt insurance does not exist. Doctors and nurses at public hospitals in the city were asked to forgo their Christmas vacations to tend to a surge in patients.

“Do you know who deserves a break and doesn’t take one?” asked political analyst Paula Sofía Vázquez on Twitter. “Doctors and health personnel who have not stopped since March, who have been isolated from their family and who also know that, thanks to collective irresponsi­bility, the worst days of the pandemic are coming.”

“He’s traveling at the worst moment of the pandemic,” political writer Denise Dresser said on Twitter of López- Gatell. “He is far from where he should be: with health personnel, implementi­ng the vaccinatio­n campaign, setting an example.”

Once an unknown bureaucrat, López- Gatell has become a political rock star in recent months, with even his romantic life closely covered by the Mexican media.

While López Obrador has refused to wear a mask and downplayed the severity of the virus, López- Gatell has served nightly sciencebas­ed reminders of the pandemic’s risks, earning him comparison­s to Dr. Anthony Fauci in the United States.

Still, López- Gatell has faced mounting criticism over a pandemic- containmen­t strategy that many believe has failed.

In the early days of the virus, Mexico made a calculatio­n: Instead of spending on testing and contact tracing, it would focus on increasing hospital capacity. Transmissi­ons soared, and the added hospital capacity wasn’t enough.

Mexico has the world’s highest rate of deaths per 100 people infected with the coronaviru­s, according to the Coronaviru­s Research Center at Johns Hopkins University. Nearly 9 people die for every 100 confirmed cases here, compared with 2 in the United States.

The country had recorded more than 127,200 COVID- 19 fatalities as of Monday — the fourth- highest death toll globally, according to the Coronaviru­s Research Center. Researcher­s at the National Autonomous University of Mexico say the true numbers may be two to four times higher.

In August, nine of Mexico’s 32 governors called for López- Gatell to resign, citing “an erratic handling of the epidemic and a lack of efficient response.” The plea, which came from members of political parties that oppose López Obrador’s ruling Morena party, was ignored by López- Gatell, and the president suggested it was politicall­y motivated.

López- Gatell isn’t the only one in Mexico to be publicly shamed for actions during the pandemic. Increasing­ly, Mexicans are pointing to an uptick in travelers from the United States that appears to have contribute­d to a rise in coronaviru­s cases and deaths in some regions. After a recent dance music festival in the Caribbean beach town of Tulum, dozens of attendees fell ill.

More than half a million Americans f lew to Mexico in November — the most recent month for which data are available — mostly to beach resorts.

An American promoter famous for hosting an annual party in Palm Springs faced criticism after organizing a festival last weekend in Puerto Vallarta. Local media reported that the event drew thousands, many from Southern California. Videos showed dance f loors teeming with shirtless, maskless men, despite the fact that events in bars and clubs are currently prohibited in the city.

“It was difficult to contain all these tourists,” said Puerto Vallarta Mayor Arturo Dávalos in a television interview Monday. “We hope this doesn’t cause infections to rise.”

 ?? Marco Ugarte Associated Press ?? A MEDICAL TEAM puts a COVID- 19 patient in an isolation chamber at a Mexico City hospital. Mexico has the world’s highest rate of deaths from the disease.
Marco Ugarte Associated Press A MEDICAL TEAM puts a COVID- 19 patient in an isolation chamber at a Mexico City hospital. Mexico has the world’s highest rate of deaths from the disease.

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