Kuwait Times

COVID: Failures in Ecuador a warning for LatAm

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GUAYAQUIL: With hundreds of bodies left decaying in homes for days due to lack of space in the city’s overwhelme­d morgues and hospitals, the coronaviru­s has struck a blow to Ecuador’s economic capital Guayaquil, now a symbol of the chaos the pandemic can unleash among Latin America’s poor. The Pacific port city has become the epicenter of South America’s struggle as the pandemic gradually tightens its grip on the region.

In Guayaquil, the stench of death floats around the hospitals. Long lines of vehicles form outside the cemeteries, loaded with cardboard coffins. For days, hundreds of bodies were left at home, or in the streets where they fell, wrapped in black plastic. Hampered by a strict 15-hour curfew, funeral services were overwhelme­d and the health sector, lacking funds and personnel, simply collapsed.

Nearly 800 corpses have been removed from homes in the city over the past couple of weeks, a government official announced late Sunday. The grim task of removal has been handed to a special force of troops and police hastily set up last week, in response to videos posted on social media by panicked residents of bodies lying in the streets. “The number that we have collected from homes with the special force has exceeded 700,” said the head of the force Jorge Wated, who is also the government spokesman.

Wated wrote on Twitter later that the number was 771. Added to 631 bodies in hospital morgues, that makes more than 1,400 awaiting burial. And worse is to come. Authoritie­s in this small South American country of 17.5 million predict up to 3,500 deaths from COVID-19 in the coming months. Guayas province, of which Guayaquil is the capital, has 73 percent of Ecuador’s more than 7,500 cases and 335 deaths.

Vulnerable port

Guayaquil, the center of the country’s economy and a key Pacific port, appeared vulnerable to the virus from the start. As a key hub, travel to and from Europe and the United States is especially intense in February and March, the main school holiday period. It was there that Ecuador’s first case was detected in February, in an elderly woman returning from Spain. Some half a million Ecuadorans reside in Spain and Italy, which are among the countries worst hit by the virus. Many emigrated to Europe during the country’s financial crisis in the 1990s.

Negligence

The problems were compounded by government negligence. Ecuador “reacted late” to the pandemic, according to Daniel Simancas, an epidemiolo­gist at the Equinox University of Technology in Quito. “This led to the devastatin­g consequenc­es that we have seen. The authoritie­s themselves have apologized for the lack of strategies in the management of corpses, and of forecastin­g of what was needed in medical materials,” Simancas said. There were also delays in purchasing test kits, coupled with a weak epidemiolo­gical surveillan­ce plan. The “cultural broth” of the port city aggravated the crisis, he said.

Inequality

Although Guayas is the most productive province in the country, more than 11 percent of Guayaquil’s population is living below the poverty line, according to official figures released in December. Unemployme­nt and under-employment affects 20 percent of the working age population. “The people want to go to work and this is due to informal employment,” where there is no social safety net, according to economist Alberto Acosta Burneo. Guayaquil native Carlos Tutiven, a sociologis­t at the University of Casa Grande, points to massive inequaliti­es in the city. No government policy “has been powerful enough to solve the inequity” in a city where the villas of the wealthy exist cheek-by-jowl with shantytown­s, he said. —AFP

 ??  ?? GUAYAQUIL: View of patients being treated for COVID-19, at the field hospital of the IESS Hospital Los Ceibos in Guayaquil, Ecuador during the novel coronaviru­s pandemic. — AFP
GUAYAQUIL: View of patients being treated for COVID-19, at the field hospital of the IESS Hospital Los Ceibos in Guayaquil, Ecuador during the novel coronaviru­s pandemic. — AFP

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