Onshore quarantine of U.S. aircraft carrier sailors begins on Guam
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[April 02, 2020]
By Maureen Maratita
HAGATNA, Guam (Reuters) - About 1,000
sailors from the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt - roughly a
fifth of its crew - were under quarantine at a U.S. naval base on Guam
on Thursday as the Navy sought to control a coronavirus outbreak aboard
the warship.
The evacuation of sailors from the vessel began on Wednesday, a week
after the first coronavirus case was reported on the aircraft carrier,
and followed public disclosure of a scathing letter to Navy command from
the ship's captain urging "decisive action" to control the outbreak.
In his four-page letter, the contents of which were confirmed by U.S.
officials to Reuters on Tuesday, Captain Brett Crozier described a bleak
situation aboard the nuclear-powered carrier as more sailors tested
positive for the virus.
The letter put the Pentagon on the defensive about whether it was doing
enough to keep the Theodore Roosevelt's 5,000 crew members safe, and
alarmed the families of those aboard the vessel, whose home port is in
San Diego.
In the letter, the captain called for more than 4,000 sailors to be
removed from the ship and isolated, saying the Navy otherwise would be
failing to properly safeguard "our most trusted asset - our sailors."
Acting U.S. Navy Secretary Thomas Modly said he disagreed with the
captain's assertion that all but 10 percent of the ship's crew could be
removed from the vessel if necessary.
"This ship has weapons on it. It has munitions on it... It requires a
certain number of people on that ship to maintain the safety and
security of the ship," Modly said.
Asked whether the captain would face discipline for the letter, he said:
"The fact that he wrote the letter up to his chain of command to express
his concerns would absolutely not result in any type of retaliation."
When questioned repeatedly over the leak, he said: "I don't know who
leaked the letter to the media. That would be something that would
violate the principles of good order and discipline, if he were
responsible for that. But I don't know that."
The carrier was in the Pacific when the outbreak started, and has since
docked at the U.S. Naval Base Guam, on the southern end of the American
island territory in the western Pacific.
HOTEL QUARANTINE ON GUAM
An initial group of 1,000 sailors were moved from the ship onto the base
on Wednesday, with the Navy saying that 93 personnel had tested positive
for the disease so far.
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The USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN-71) is seen while entering into the
port in Da Nang, Vietnam, March 5, 2020. REUTERS/Kham/
Those testing positive or showing flu-like symptoms were placed in
isolation for treatment, while the rest were quarantined, the
region's U.S. Navy commander, Rear Admiral John Menoni, said during
a news conference on the island on Thursday.
Those who remain asymptomatic and test negative will be transported
to vacant hotel space about 8 miles away in Guam's commercial Tumon
district, where they will remain quarantined for two weeks,
territorial Governor Lourdes Leon Guerrero told Reuters.
The quarantined sailors will be moved to hotel quarters in the next
12 to 24 hours in an operation that will be run entirely by the U.S.
military, Menoni said.
The Navy said on Wednesday that 2,700 crew would ultimately be
removed from the ship over the next few days.
Menoni insisted that the aircraft carrier, despite the outbreak, "is
not incapacitated" and "could go to sea tomorrow if conditions
required."
The admiral said he was unaware of any discussions surrounding
possible discipline of the ship's captain, adding, "That's not my
role."
Guam governor Leon Guerrero said some residents of the island, whose
tourist-based economy has been devastated by the coronavirus
pandemic, had been "pushing back" against welcoming the stricken
aircraft carrier to shore.
But she was assured the sailors would be kept completely isolated
from Guam's population.
"These are our sailors who go out in harm's way to protect our
security in this part of the world," she said. "I feel I have the
moral obligation to reciprocate if I could."
As of Thursday, Leon Guerrero said, Guam had 77 known cases of
coronavirus, including three deaths.
(Reporting by Maureen Maratita in Hagatna, Guam; Additional
reporting by Idrees Ali and Phil Stewart in Washington; Writing and
additional reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; editing by
Philippa Fletcher)
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