US coronavirus plan would evacuate some Americans from quarantined cruise ship in Japan: report
Hundreds of Americans quarantined on a cruise ship docked off the coast of Yokohama, Japan, for more than a week due to a coronavirus –
now called COVID-19 -- outbreak onboard will have the chance to
evacuate, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Friday,
according to a report. Approximately 380 Americans and their
families on the Diamond Princess will be offered seats on two flights
that could arrive at Travis Air Force Base near Sacramento, Calif., as early as Sunday, a CDC official told The Wall Street Journal.
A group of quarantined passengers exercise on the Diamond Princess
cruise ship Saturday, Feb. 15, 2020, in Yokohama, near Tokyo.
(Associated Press)
A CDC team will screen passengers and those exhibiting symptoms won’t be allowed on the flights. Passengers
were placed under in a two-week quarantine Feb. 5 and since then the
number of cases onboard has climbed to 218, including some Americans, in
the largest outbreak outside of China. There are a total of 428 Americans onboard the ship, The New York Post reported.
The quarantined Diamond Princess cruise ship is shown in Yokohama, near Tokyo, Feb. 11, 2020. (Associated Press)
In a letter, nine U.S. House representatives, led by
Rep. Phil Roe, R-Tenn., had urged the Trump administration to evacuate
the Americans. Roe is a physician and the ranking member of the House
Veterans Affairs Committee. “From firsthand accounts, we are
concerned about the existing level of care available on the ship,
particularly to the 428 US citizens aboard, as well as the national
security concerns posed by reported quarantine conditions,” the
lawmakers wrote, according to The Post.
“From
firsthand accounts, we are concerned about the existing level of care
available on the ship, particularly to the 428 US citizens aboard, as
well as the national security concerns posed by reported quarantine
conditions.” — Letter from U.S. lawmakers, urging evacuation of Americans aboard cruise ship
Roe
said he has been in contact with Dr. Arnold Hopland, a physician from
Elizabethton, Tenn., who is aboard the ship. Hopland told Roe that crew
members have been doing their best to protect the quarantined pasengers,
the Johnson City Press reported. Once
in the U.S., the evacuated passengers will either be quarantined for
two weeks at the California base or at Lackland Air Force Base in San
Antonio, Texas, The Journal reported. Around
230 Americans who were evacuated from Wuhan, China, the epicenter of
the virus, are already in quarantine at Travis. The arriving cruise ship
passengers would be kept separate from them. Earlier
this week, the cruise ship company said Japanese health officials would
remove some passengers to finish their quarantine at an onshore
facility. More than 66,000 people have been sickened in mainland
China and more than 1,500 have been killed by the virus as of Friday
evening. CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP In
Beijing, state-run TV Friday announced residents returning from Lunar
New Year celebrations must quarantine themselves for two weeks and could
face legal consequences otherwise, according to The Times.
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