Medicine Hat News

Canadian troops test positive for COVID-19 in Latvia and Kuwait

- LEE BERTHIAUME

The Canadian Armed Forces is dealing with a COVID-19 outbreak in Latvia, where an unspecifie­d number of troops have tested positive for the illness while guarding against Russian aggression in the region.

The Department of National Defence confirmed on Tuesday that military personnel at Camp Adazi near the Latvian capital of Riga have contracted COVID-19, though it would not provide specific numbers.

“The Canadian Armed Forces have some members deployed on Operation Reassuranc­e in Latvia (who) have tested positive for COVID19,” Defence Department spokesman Daniel Le Bouthillie­r said in a statement.

“For operationa­l security reasons, specific numbers of affected members will not be released.”

Canada has 540 soldiers in Latvia, where the Canadian military has been leading a NATO battlegrou­p that includes troops from nine other countries as a check against Russian incursions into eastern Europe and the Baltics.

Media reports have indicated that troops from some of those other countries have also tested positive for COVID-19, and that NATO and

Latvian officials were scrambling to contain the outbreak.

Britain, Germany and the United States are leading similar battlegrou­ps in neighbouri­ng Estonia, Lithuania and Poland, all of which were establishe­d after Russia annexed the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine in 2014.

The Canadian Armed Forces reported Tuesday that 732 military members have tested positive for COVID-19 since the start of the pandemic in March, an increase of 56 since last week.

Thirty-two still had the illness, more than double the 15 that were reported last week.

The current contingent of soldiers in Latvia arrived in July only after their plane turned back in midair because of concerns the troops might have been exposed to COVID-19 before leaving Canada.

While such deployment­s are often six months long, Le Bouthillie­r said Ottawa and Riga are in discussion­s about when the group can return home and be replaced by a new contingent.

He suggested any decision would remain secret due to security concerns, even though such rotations have been publicly revealed in the past.

The infections in Latvia follow an outbreak among Canadian military personnel in Kuwait at the beginning of December.

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