US evacuees freed from Covid-19 quarantine, officials fear discrimination

LOS ANGELES, Feb 12 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Nearly 200 people evacuated from the China Covid-19 outbreak were released from quarantine in California on Tuesday with officials urging Americans not to shun them, or workers who helped them, after both groups faced discrimination.

The 195 U.S. citizens, mostly U.S. State Department employees and their families, underwent the United States’ first mandatory quarantine since 1963 after they were evacuated from the coronavirus-stricken Chinese city of Wuhan.

They were flown by government-chartered cargo plane on Jan 29 to March Air Reserve Base in Riverside County about 97km east of Los Angeles, where they were in quarantine for 14 days – the outer limit of the virus’ possible incubation period.

None tested positive for coronavirus, but their arrival stoked unfounded fears in the local community that they or base personnel would spread the disease, Riverside County public health officer Cameron Kaiser told a press conference.

“They don’t need additional tests, they don’t need to be shunned, they don’t have Covid-19,” Kaiser told reporters after his department published a photo of the former patients throwing away their masks in a quarantine graduation ceremony.

The fast-spreading virus has killed more than 1,000 people in China, where there have been nearly 43,000 cases. There have been more than 300 confirmed cases in 24 other countries, including 13 in the United States.

Over 800 people have been evacuated from Wuhan on six US evacuation flights since Jan 28. Hundreds have been quarantined on airbases in California, Texas and Nebraska, according to the US State Department.

The March airbase group was limited to a fenced quarantine area where only official medical staff were allowed to enter.

Rear Admiral Nancy Knight, who is running the quarantine operation, said base personnel had been refused housing in the local community due to fears they would spread coronavirus and their children had suffered discrimination at school.

She said neither her staff nor evacuees posed a health risk to the public.

“They have been watched more closely than anyone in the United States at this time,” Knight said of the evacuees.

The base has held three commercial airline passengers taken into mandatory quarantine after screening at Los Angeles International Airport, Knight said.

One of these three travellers has been released after completing a 14-day quarantine period, she said.

The United States has also authorised the voluntary departure of US government employees and their relatives from Hong Kong, the State Department said on Tuesday.

The authorisation was made “out of an abundance of caution related to uncertainties associated” with the disease, according to a department representative.