Orlando Sentinel

Dozens of Latin leaders test positive for virus

- By Michael Weissenste­in and David Biller

HAVANA — The COVID-19 pandemic is sweeping through the leadership of Latin America, with two more presidents and powerful officials testing positive last week for the new coronaviru­s, adding a destabiliz­ing new element to the region’s public health and economic crises.

In Brazil, President Jair Bolsonaro, 65, announced his illness July 7 and is using it to publicly extol hydroxychl­oroquine, the unproven malaria drug that he’s been promoting as a treatment for COVID-19, and now takes himself.

Bolivian interim President Jeanine Anez, 53, made her own diagnosis public Thursday, throwing her already troubled political prospects into further doubt.

And in Venezuela, 57year-old socialist party chief Diosdado Cabello said Thursday on Twitter that he, too, had tested positive, at least temporaril­y sidelining a larger-than-life figure considered the secondmost-powerful person in the country.

Another powerful figure, Venezuela’s Oil Minister Tarek El Aissami, announced Friday he has the bug.

An Associated Press review of official statements from public officials across Latin America found at least 42 confirmed cases of new coronaviru­s in leaders ranging from presidents to mayors of major cities, along with dozens, likely hundreds, of officials from smaller cities and towns. In most cases, high-ranking officials recovered and are back at work. But several are still struggling with the disease.

Many leaders have used their diagnoses to call on the public to heighten precaution­s like social distancing and mask wearing. But like Bolsonaro, some have drawn attention to unproven treatments with potentiall­y harmful side effects.

El Salvador’s Interior Minister, Mario Duran, was diagnosed July 5, becoming the second Cabinet member there to fall ill.

“I am asking you, now more than ever, to stay home and take all preventive measures,” he said after his diagnosis. “Protect your families.”

Duran was receiving treatment at home.

Honduras President Juan Orlando Hernandez announced June 16 that he and his wife had tested positive, along with two other people who worked closely with the couple.

The following day the 51-year-old Hernandez was hospitaliz­ed after doctors determined he had pneumonia. The president’s illness came as the pandemic spread from an early epicenter in the northern city of San Pedro Sula to the capital of Tegucigalp­a, where cases surged.

Hernandez said he had started what he called the “MAIZ treatment,” an experiment­al and unproven combinatio­n of microdacyn, azithromyc­in, ivermectin and zinc that his government is promoting as an affordable way of attacking the disease. He was released from the hospital July 2.

The revelation that Cabello — whose commanding voice resonates from Venezuelan airwaves every Wednesday on his weekly television show — has

COVID-19 will likely have a sobering impact on the many people who thought their isolated country was relatively shielded from the virus, said Luis Vicente Leon, a Venezuelan political analyst.

Venezuela — already largely cut off to the outside world before COVID-19 — has had far fewer registered cases than many other countries in Latin America, though in recent weeks the number of new confirmed infections has been steadily increasing.

Cabello said he was in isolation while getting treatment. A day earlier, he’d canceled his regular TV appearance, telling followers he was battling “strong allergies.”

No informatio­n has been released on whether Cabello

is hospitaliz­ed or what type of medical care he is receiving. Venezuela is considered one of the least prepared countries in the world to confront the pandemic. Hospitals are routinely short on basic supplies like water, electricit­y and medicine.

Like Bolsonaro, many Latin leaders have kept up a schedule of public appearance­s even as the region has become one of the hardesthit in the world.

That poses a growing risk to governance in the region, said Felicia Knaul, a professor of medicine who directs the Institute for Advanced Study of the Americas at the University of Miami.

“We’re trying to keep our health providers safe. It’s the same for our government leaders. We don’t want a Cabinet ill and in hospital. It would be tremendous­ly destabiliz­ing in a situation that’s already extremely unstable,“she said. “That’s a reason why being out in public unless everyone around you has masks on is dangerous. They have to be responsibl­e.”

Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei placed his entire Cabinet and their staff in quarantine Thursday after one of his ministers tested positive.

In Bolivia, officials said the interim president Anez had not been displaying symptoms and was in good spirits in her official residence.

COVID-19 is spreading rapidly in Bolivia, overwhelmi­ng the already weak medical system and funeral services to the point where families in the central city of Cochabamba have been holding funerals in the street.

With the country in crisis, some polls have shown Anez in last place in a three-way presidenti­al race leading to September elections.

Anez, who took office after President Evo Morales was ousted during national unrest last year, does not have a vice president and, if she could no longer serve, the next in the line of succession is Senate President Eva Copa, a member of Morales’ party and a bitter opponent of Anez.

 ?? MATIAS DELACROIX/AP ?? Socialist party president Diosdado Cabello jokes with lawmakers at the National Assembly in Caracas, Venezuela. Cabello announced last week that he has tested positive for COVID-19.
MATIAS DELACROIX/AP Socialist party president Diosdado Cabello jokes with lawmakers at the National Assembly in Caracas, Venezuela. Cabello announced last week that he has tested positive for COVID-19.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States