Gulf Times

France defends handling of aircraft carrier outbreak

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France defended its handling of the spread of the coronaviru­s through its flagship Charles de Gaulle aircraft carrier fleet, after more than a 1,000 sailors tested positive for the Covid-19 disease caused by the virus.

Of the 2,300 sailors in the carrier group, 1,081 had so far tested positive with about 300 results still to be finalised.

Twenty-four crew were in hospital, including one in intensive care, and 545 showing Covid-19 symptoms were being monitored.

The rapid spread of the disease on board the 42-tonne warship with more than 1,700 sailors has raised questions similar to those that arose from an outbreak on board the US carrier Theodore Roosevelt.

That led to the firing of a captain who had called for more help, and the resignatio­n of the navy secretary who sacked him.

Several French media outlets have quoted crew members saying that there was tension on board the French carrier as the disease spread, after it stopped last month in the French Atlantic Ocean port of Brest and was sent back out to sea.

Yesterday Armed Forces Minister Florence Parly denied one report – from a crew member interviewe­d by France Bleu radio – that said the captain had offered to halt the mission in Brest, but the ministry had ordered the ship to keep sailing.

“This rumour is false,” Parly told a parliament­ary hearing, indicating that as soon as cases were detected on April 7, she took the decision to end the mission.

After the stop in Brest, the ship remained at sea for several more weeks until returning to its Mediterran­ean home port, Toulon, two weeks ahead of schedule, with 40 sailors on board already showing signs of Covid-19.

“People have to understand that it is out of question to put in danger the crew. Without a crew, it is nothing,” Navy spokesman

Eric Lavault told RTL radio late on Thursday.

“The command took all the protective measures and from the Brest stopover there were temperatur­e checks twice a day and questionna­ires to trace contacts.

“But this is not a cruise ship. It’s a warship that wages war against the Islamic State,” he said.

Crew from the Charles de Gaulle, its planes and helicopter­s and the accompanyi­ng frigate Chevalier Paul are now in quarantine.

The carrier is being disinfecte­d and will sail again in June, Parly said.

France, the Western country with the most troops deployed on active mission abroad apart from the United States, has had to weigh the need to protect its soldiers and sailors from the disease against the desire to press on with missions.

The army has already been forced to bring back some soldiers from operations in Africa after they tested positive for the virus, although Parly said only a mission in the Gulf of Guinea had been suspended.

The military is investigat­ing how the coronaviru­s arrived on board the carrier.

Officials say the March 13-16 stopover in Brest, which took place just before France went into lockdown, may have been to blame.

Sailors were allowed to meet their families on land and were seen in restaurant­s and cafes before returning to the ship, although an initial plan to allow families on board was scrapped.

Fifty new sailors also boarded the ship.

She added that a stopover in the Cypriot city of Limassol on February 20-21 was also being investigat­ed.

“We still don’t know if the virus was already on board before its stopover on March 13,” Parly said.

“There are several hypotheses. We all have in mind the stopover in Brest between March 13-16, which was just before the confinemen­t,” she said.

 ??  ?? This handout picture released by the Marine Nationale shows a team led by navy soldiers, firefighte­rs and members of a Navy’s disinfecti­on special unit, working near the French aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle after it arrived in the southern French port of Toulon.
This handout picture released by the Marine Nationale shows a team led by navy soldiers, firefighte­rs and members of a Navy’s disinfecti­on special unit, working near the French aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle after it arrived in the southern French port of Toulon.

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