Covid-19

Haiti COVID-19 Peak & Hurricanes Set to Collide as US Deportations Increase


IMG_7295.PNG

Haiti COVID-19 Peak Set to Collide With Hurricanes

A multitude of crises may converge as Haiti struggles with food insecurity exacerbated by a drought this year, ensuing political and social unrest and COVID-19. Up to now, Haiti has yielded low cases but doctors fear social attitudes, lack of funding and a fragile healthcare system with just 100 ventilators and a few hospital beds will hamper mitigation efforts. With global modeling projecting peak infection rates in June, right about the start of hurricane season, which runs through November, concerns are naturally high. Forecasters anticipate a busier than usual hurricane season, with four of the 16 predicted storms expected to become major hurricanes due to warming Atlantic sea surface temperatures linked to climate change. Emergency shelters are being prepared for the upcoming storms, with shelters updated to allow for social distancing, but concerns linger among humanitarian agencies that COVID-19 could spread in overcrowded shelters. An additional concern is the increased number of Haitian migrants returning due to coronavirus lockdowns and economic downturns, and with little to no control at border crossings, virus screenings and information sharing are nonexistent. Thus far, 17,000 Haitians have returned and the Pan American Health Organization estimates 55,000 migrants will cross the border in the coming weeks. (Reuters)

Analysis

Meanwhile the United States continues to deport migrants and asylum seekers from its borders, including Haitians. On May 11, a deportation flight from Texas to Haiti departed with 50 passengers who were sent to hotels for quarantine upon arrival in Port-au-Prince at the Haitian government’s expense. However, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) did not deport five Haitians who tested positive for COVID-19 on that flight only after media reports revealed US government plans to initially deport them as well. Deporting individuals who are known to be infected with the virus violates US and international public health guidelines to prevent the spread of the virus. Since April deportations, three Haitians have tested positive for COVID-19 upon arrival in Haiti. 

In Guatemala, 15% of its caseload comprise US deportees, where at least 117 Guatemalans deported from the US have now tested positive as of May 4. On April 13, dozens of Guatemalan deportees tested positive for COVID-19. Guatemala first suspended deportations from the US but then allowed them to resume after the US promised stringent testing. However last week, a deportee who tested negative was confirmed COVID-19 positive upon arrival in Guatemala. 

Under a new Trump Administration deportation policy, presented though as a public health policy, US Border Control Agents are now empowered to turn away any migrant without hearing claims whatsoever. The move comes through the use of an arcane public health policy that gives the CDC the power to ban entry of people who may spread infectious disease. Regardless of its presentation, the policy still presents a total violation of the right to seek asylum under US and international law. 


US Faces Hurricane Season Alongside Coronavirus


Wade Austin Ellis/UNSPLASH

Wade Austin Ellis/UNSPLASH

Coronavirus Pandemic Threatens to Suffocate US Hurricane Response

June 1 marks the start of hurricane season in the US, only this year, the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is bracing for a higher than usual amount of hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean, where the norm is typically six. Social distancing to prevent COVID-19 is a new problem to factor into evacuation plans this year. New Jersey says widespread evacuations will be a last resort and will consider renting hotel rooms to accommodate social distancing. Concerns linger over stretched financial resources and rescue teams. The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) says it has created a national coordination center for non-COVID-19 disaster response but city and state officials are wary, with concerns circulating over whether they will be left to bear the costs of both crises. Nearly half of Houston’s $20 million disaster relief fund has already been spent on coronavirus and 2017 Hurricane Harvey response. Although the US Congress has passed bills allocating nearly $3 trillion in response to the pandemic, only $150 billion or so in aid is set aside for states and cities. New York City’s Comptroller, referring to the fact that New York state is now the highest number of cases in the US and the world, says the city is not prepared for a storm, let alone a hurricane and ensuing crisis on top of the COVID-19 crisis already underway. (Reuters). 


Pakistan Faces Second Locust Battle, Challenging Food Security Amid Virus Fight and Refugee Concerns


Lumensoft Technologies/UNSPLASH

Lumensoft Technologies/UNSPLASH

Pakistan Readies for Second Battle Against Crop-Devouring Locusts

An impending second infestation in as many years that could destroy sugarcane, cotton, rice, fruit and vegetable crops is a deeper concern for farmers than the current novel coronavirus pandemic. The Sindh province chief minister warns of a “massive locust attack” expected from Iran in mid-May, worse than the previous year. The UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) is warning of dire food insecurity if the crops are eaten by locusts, prices of staples like flour and vegetables skyrocketing and losses as high as $2.8 billion for summer crops and $2.2 billion for winter crops. Last year, Pakistan suffered its worst attack of locusts since 1993 in all four of its provinces, for which it was unprepared, and a repeat this year in the midst of COVID-19 could be catastrophic for Pakistan’s poorest communities. Unprecedented rains in Sindh’s desert led to vegetation cover that enabled locust breeding and crop attacks. FAO and climate scientists say warming oceans have led to increased cyclones in the Indian Ocean, causing heavy rainfall in the Arabian Peninsula and Horn of Africa, creating the perfect environment for locust breeding and the resulting swarms seen in East Africa, the Middle East and South Asia. Insects are laying eggs in nearly 40% of Pakistan and previously unaffected regions are now also impacted. Experts predict swarms, much larger than the ones in 2019, breeding in Pakistan’s deserts are likely to be joined by others in Iran, with more arriving from the Horn of Africa around July. The swarms are expected to be much larger than those in 2019 and travel in swarms of 30 to 50 million insects that cover 93 miles and devour 200 tons of crops per day. (Reuters)

Analysis

Per UNHCR estimates, Pakistan hosts 1.4 million Afghan refugees within its borders. As of today, Pakistan has 35,788 COVID-19 cases, the majority split between the Punjab and Sindh provinces, where 770 people have died. Neighboring Iran has 115,000 COVID-19 cases and hosts approximately 3 million Afghans. Together, Pakistan and Iran, host 90% of the world’s 2.7 million Afghan refugees. Afghanistan has 5,639 COVID-19 cases, and Afghan refugees in Iran and Pakistan, despite persistent violence in the country, including a horrific terror attack this week, continue to return home due to the coronavirus pandemic in Iran and Pakistan. Meanwhile, it’s the holy month of Ramadan, ending in late May, where an uptick in food buying and consumption is likely, all of which can have an impact on market supply and demand, further contributing to concerns of regional food insecurity. With pandemic response, economic losses and additional humanitarian needs converging with spikes in food insecurity, violence and refugee returns, the pressures are immense for not only some of the world’s most vulnerable populations but also those living on the margins of survival. 


Weakened by War & Flood, Yemen Fights Twin Health Threat


Annie Spratt/UNSPLASH

Annie Spratt/UNSPLASH

Weakened by War and Floods, Yemen Fights Twin Health Threat

“The War and climate change have created a humanitarian crisis.” This is what Abdulla Bin Ghouth, an epidemiologist from Yemen’s Hadhramout University College of Medicine says as Yemen announces an official tally of 72 cases of the novel coronavirus and 13 deaths, but health experts say the real numbers are likely much higher due to serious under-counting in the north and south of the country and lack of testing and tracking in the Arabina Peninsula. Life appears to be continuing as normal though, as people gather in crowded spaces, don’t social distance or take any protective measures despite government warnings. Yemen has been crippled by years of war and severe food shortages and now a wave of diseases linked to heavy rains are on the rise, straining an already shattered healthcare system, which health experts warn will be pushed to the brink of collapse with the coronavirus pandemic. Doctors are dealing with a rise in mosquito-borne diseases following rains and flash floods that began in January and brought with it a sharp spike in dengue and other viral fever cases, now disrupting the fight against the novel coronavirus. Where doctors usually saw three cases a day, in the past month alone, they have seen hundreds of patients with dengue and viral fevers and dozens of deaths. One hospital noted 6,000 cases of fever in only two months. Now also dealing with a shortage of testing kits and medical equipment, doctors are finding it impossible to diagnose whether patients are infected with COVID-19 or something else. (Reuters)

Analysis

As of today, Yemen has 85 positive COVID-19 cases. Since 2015, Yemen has suffered three Cholera outbreaks, a water-borne illness, where water has become weaponized in the civil war. Laws regulating water use are lacking, while climate stresses like extreme heat and drought have worsened social and health problems. Climate security experts count Yemen among countries that are at risk for increased conflict borne by climate change-fueled drought and water scarcity, made worse because the growing humanitarian needs strain the state’s ability to deal with the climate risks. 


Coronavirus Underscores Climate Health Threats


Ryoji Iwata/UNSPLASH

Ryoji Iwata/UNSPLASH

Coronavirus Pandemic Underscores Climate Health Threats

Health experts warn that vulnerability to climate-related health threats is likely greater than previously believed. This extends from healthcare facilities built in the path of floodplains and wildfires, inabilities to track outbreaks, to privileged classes realizing that they can’t escape ill-equipped local healthcare systems during a lockdown. This new realization has led some countries to begin plans for new hospitals and additional funding to help secure vaccines. The virus has also made clear the nexus of extreme poverty and pandemic, bringing home to some the realities of the deep interconnectedness a subsistence farmer has to food insecurity and a laborer has to rising global temperatures. Elena Villalobos Prats, World Health Organization climate change and public health expert says two-thirds of the countries party to the 2015 Paris Agreement have considered climate threats to health in its national climate plans but only half have adaptation plans to its health systems, while only 0.5% of international climate finance is spent on health threats. Experts are now focused on whether the novel coronavirus crisis can be a learning tool to drive awareness of global vulnerability to better prepare the world for the next big health threat of climate change. (Reuters)


East Africa Flood Displacement - Ugandan Hospital, Somali Town Washed Away Amid Virus Battle


David Anderson/UNSPLASH

David Anderson/UNSPLASH

Ugandan Hospital, Somali Town Washed Away by East Africa Floods

Hundreds have died and thousands are displaced across Kenya, Uganda, Somalia, Rwanda and Ethiopia. Another hospital in western Uganda was flooded, hospital wards, drug dispensaries and  mortuaries have been impacted, further complicating planning and response to COVID-19, and increasing contagion risks with mass displacements that don’t allow for social distancing. Ethiopia’s Somali region has more than 100,000 people displaced, while casualties are unknown in the Somali town in Puntland, which washed away the entire town. Climate experts in Kenya say the heavy rains are due to the increased temperatures in the Indian Ocean and are a spillover of effects seen last year, when heavy rains and landslides impacted the region. Kenya has lost nearly 200 people and 100,000 are displaced, now living in camps, where authorities fear coronavirus spread could increase as a result. (Reuters)