San Diego Union-Tribune

U.S. OFFERING COVID-19 VACCINE TO PRISONERS HELD AT GUANTANAMO

Move comes after criticism of initial plan months ago

- BY BEN FOX

Prisoners at the Guantanamo Bay detention center can now begin getting the COVID-19 vaccine, a senior defense official told The Associated Press on Monday, months after a plan to inoculate them was scuttled over outrage that many Americans weren’t eligible to receive the shots.

The new timing coincides with President Joe Biden’s deadline for states to make the vaccines more widely available across the U.S. Anyone 16 and older now qualifies to sign up to be vaccinated.

The defense official said all 40 men held at the Navy base in Cuba will be offered the vaccinatio­n to comply with legal requiremen­ts regarding the treatment of prisoners and to help prevent COVID-19 from spreading. Strict quarantine procedures had already sharply curtailed activities at the base and halted legal proceeding­s for prisoners facing war crime trials, including the men charged in the Sept. 11, 2001, attack.

“Obviously, we don’t want an outbreak of COVID on a remote island with the challenges that would present,” the official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the effort ahead of an official announceme­nt.

The announceme­nt in January that the military intended to offer the vaccine to prisoners sparked intense criticism, particular­ly among Republican­s in Congress, at a time when COVID-19 vaccines were just being rolled out to troops and civilians at Guantanamo and were not widely available in the U.S.

Several Republican members of Congress backed legislatio­n that would have blocked Guantanamo prisoners from receiving the vaccine until all Americans had the opportunit­y to receive it.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy criticized the decision on Twitter. “President Biden told us he would have a plan to defeat the virus on day 1,” the California Republican said on Jan. 30. “He just never told us that it would be to give the vaccine to terrorists before most Americans.”

Though the decision to vaccinate the prisoners may still prove controvers­ial, a key difference now is that the vaccine is now more widely available, both on the base and throughout the U.S. Half of all adults in the country have received at least one dose of the shot.

At Guantanamo Bay Naval Station, 56 percent of the total population of about 5,700 people, a mix of military personnel, contractor­s and dependents, has been vaccinated, and the shot is available to any adult who wants it, said Dawn Grimes, a public affairs officer for the base hospital.

There are about 1,500 people

assigned to the task force that runs the detention center on the base. There have been no known cases of COVID-19 among them, nor among any of the prisoners.

Medical personnel have already discussed the vaccine with the prisoners. The military does not plan to disclose how many ultimately choose to accept it, the official said, citing medical privacy regulation­s.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON AP FILE ?? There have been no known cases of COVID-19 among prisoners at the Guantanamo Bay detention center.
ALEX BRANDON AP FILE There have been no known cases of COVID-19 among prisoners at the Guantanamo Bay detention center.

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