Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump’s China ‘wall’ had holes

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President Donald Trump has repeatedly credited his February ban on travelers from mainland China as his signature move against the advance of the coronaviru­s pandemic — a “strong wall” that allowed only U.S. citizens inside, he boasted in May.

Exempted were thousands of residents of the Chinese territorie­s of Hong Kong and Macau. Efforts to track U.S. residents returning from mainland China were riddled with errors and broken communicat­ions.

An analysis of Commerce Department travel entry records and private aviation data obtained by the Associated Press shows that nearly 8,000 Chinese nationals and foreign residents of Hong Kong and Macao entered the U.S. on more than 600 commercial and private flights in the first three months after the ban was imposed.

When U.S. residents flying from mainland China arrived at

U.S. airports, the system meant to flag and monitor them for the developmen­t of symptoms lost track of at least 1,600 people in just the first few days the ban went into effect, according to internal state government emails obtained by the AP.

Trump’s continuing travel restrictio­ns on China, which he followed with a ban on travel from European nations in March and a new prohibitio­n on entry from virus-plagued Brazil last month, remain the administra­tion’s first line of defense against foreign sources of the pandemic.

“We did a great job on CoronaViru­s, including the very early ban on China,” Trump tweeted last week. “We saved millions of U.S. lives!”

Trump on Jan. 31 announced the original travel ban on any non-U.S. residents who had recently been in mainland China. His action came weeks after Chinese officials acknowledg­ed a new highly contagious and deadly virus was spreading through the city of Wuhan.

Travelers from Hong Kong and Macau were exempted from that ban, and they did not face the same enhanced screening and quarantine procedures required of Americans and others returning from Wuhan and China’s mainland.

Flight records by FlightAwar­e, an internatio­nal aviation tracking company, show that more than 5,600 Chinese and foreign nationals from the two administra­tive zones flew to the U.S. in February. Those totals dropped to 2,100 in March and just 150 in April, entry records show.

There is no clear evidence that the small but steady flow of people from Hong Kong and Macau introduced COVID-19 cases inside the U.S. in January or in the four months since, but the exemptions “certainly undercut the purpose of the ban,” said Dr. Ronald Waldman, a professor of Global Health at George Washington University.

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