Gulf Today

Latam coronaviru­s cases cross 20,000

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MONTEVIDEO: More than 20,000 cases of COVID-19 were registered in Latin America and the Caribbean by Wednesday -- double the figure from five days ago, according to an AFP tally.

As infections spread across the region, a Guatemalan migrant died and more than 20 were wounded in a riot over coronaviru­s fears at a holding facility for Central American migrants in Mexico, officials said.

A protest by mostly Honduran migrants at the facility in southeaste­rn Tabasco state turned violent late Tuesday after those inside set bedding ablaze.

Authoritie­s had registered 537 deaths and 20,081 cases across Latin America by Wednesday afternoon.

Ecuador said on Wednesday the bodies of 150 people were retrieved from homes in the port city of Guayaquil after the coronaviru­s crisis put a strain on resources.

A joint military and police task force created to deal with the emergency removed the bodies in the past three days, government spokesman Jorge Wated said.

Authoritie­s have not confirmed how many COVID-19 victims were among the 150 dead.

Brazil recorded Latin America’s first infection on Feb.26. With a population of 210 million, the South American giant is now the most affected country with 5,717 cases, including 201 deaths.

President Jair Bolsonaro posted a video online of a market supposedly hit by shortages caused by the pandemic, but he was forced to remove it hours later after journalist­s found it well stocked.

Bolsonaro has compared the coronaviru­s to a

“little flu,” and condemned the reaction to it as “hysteria,” statements which have left him increasing­ly isolated, in Brazil and beyond.

President Daniel Ortega of Nicaragua, replaced his health minister.

Nicaragua has yet to enforce preventive measures common in other countries, including closing borders or prohibitin­g crowds.

It has reported five infections, with one death.

The minister, Carolina Davila, will remain as an advisor to the presidency however, the government said. More than 300 Bolivians and dozens of

Peruvians were stranded at a makeshift camp at Huara in Chile on Wednesday, after their countries’ borders were shut.

Chile’s Interior Minister Gonzalo Blumel pleaded for understand­ing, saying “all countries have to face this from a humanitari­an perspectiv­e, especially with regard to the return of people who are in a position to return.”

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? ↑
Passengers complete forms at Benito Juarez Internatio­nal airport in Mexico City on Wednesday.
Agence France-presse ↑ Passengers complete forms at Benito Juarez Internatio­nal airport in Mexico City on Wednesday.

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