U.S. limits travel from Brazil amid worsening coronavirus outbreak

U.S. limits travel from Brazil amid worsening coronavirus outbreak

by Joseph Anthony
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Demonstrators take part in a protest in favor of Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro in front of the Planalto Palace

The White House on Sunday said it was restricting travel from Brazil to the United States, two days after the South American nation became the worldโ€™s No. 2 hotspot for coronavirus cases.

The travel ban was a blow to right-wing Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, who has followed the example of U.S. President Donald Trump in addressing the pandemic, fighting calls for social distancing and touting unproven drugs. The Brazilian presidentโ€™s office did not respond to a request for comment.

โ€œThe U.S. maintains a strong partnership with Brazil and we work closely to mitigate the socioeconomic and health impacts of COVID-19 in Brazil,โ€ the U.S. Embassy in Brasilia said in a statement.

The new restrictions come into force on May 28, the embassy said, prohibiting most non-U.S. citizens from traveling to the United States if they have been in Brazil in the last two weeks. Green card holders, close relatives of U.S. citizens and flight crew members, among select others, would be exempt.

Brazilโ€˜s foreign ministry called it a technical decision in the context of โ€œimportant bilateral collaborationโ€ to fight the COVID-19 pandemic, highlighting U.S. donations of $6.5 million and a new White House promise of 1,000 respirators.

White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany said the new restrictions would help ensure foreign nationals do not bring additional infections to the United States, but would not apply to the flow of commerce between the two countries.

National security adviser Robert Oโ€™Brien earlier on Sunday told CBSโ€™ โ€œFace the Nationโ€ he hoped the move could be reconsidered at some point.

โ€œWe hope thatโ€™ll be temporary, but because of the situation in Brazil, weโ€™re going to take every step necessary to protect the American people,โ€ Oโ€™Brien said.

An advisor to Brazilโ€˜s president played down Trumpโ€™s move, highlighting shared views on fighting the virus with unproven anti-malarial drugs such as hydroxychloroquine.

โ€œThere is nothing specific against Brazil,โ€ tweeted Filipe Martins, an advisor on international affairs to Bolsonaro.

Two hours earlier, he wrote that Trump had โ€œopened a direct line for the exchange of information about the protocol for using hydroxychloroquine and other treatments for the virus.โ€

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration warned last month about using the drug to treat the COVID-19 respiratory disease caused by the novel coronavirus, citing โ€œreports of serious heart rhythm problemsโ€ in patients receiving the medicine.

Bolsonaroโ€™s insistence on the drugโ€™s potential and defiance of state isolation orders pushed out two health ministers in a month, both trained doctors. The acting head of the Health Ministry, an army general, issued guidelines this week to expand use of the drug in coronavirus cases.

Brazilโ€˜s Health Ministry raised its tally of confirmed cases by 15,813 on Sunday to 363,211 cases, second in the world behind the United States, with more than 1.6 million cases.

Brazilโ€˜s death toll, which often slows over the weekend due to reporting delays, rose by 653 confirmed fatalities on Sunday to 22,666 dead in total, well behind nearly 100,000 U.S. deaths.

REUTERS

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