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Hondurans who fled Hurricanes Iota and Eta now face coronavirus in overcrowded shelters

“You don’t see mask use, you don’t see people socially distancing, you don’t see people washing their hands with any great intensity - the shelters are just overwhelmed,” said an aid worker.
Image: People queue for food under an overpass, where they are sheltered along other residents that lost their homes due to the floods caused by heavy rain brought by Storm Iota, in San Pedro Sula
People queue for food under an overpass, where they are sheltered along other residents that lost their homes due to the floods caused by heavy rain brought by Storm Iota, in San Pedro Sula, Honduras on Nov. 19, 2020.Jorge Cabrera / Reuters

SAN PEDRO SULA, Honduras - Tens of thousands of Hondurans are cramming into overcrowded storm shelters, aid workers and officials say, raising concerns that the chaotic set-up will trigger a new spike in coronavirus infections.

Hundreds of thousands of people across Central America have fled their homes after Hurricanes Iota and Eta wreaked havoc from Tabasco in southern Mexico to Panama this month.

Workers at four international aid organizations and two local church leaders told Reuters that inadequate sanitary conditions at shelters in the northern city of San Pedro Sula were a serious concern.

“The most pressing health concern is coronavirus,” said Matt Hackworth, a senior advisor at Lutheran World Relief, who said he had visited several shelters in the area.

“You don’t see mask use, you don’t see people socially distancing, you don’t see people washing their hands with any great intensity - the shelters are just overwhelmed.”

A Reuters witness at one shelter saw large groups of people of all ages lying near each other on mattresses on the floor, and walking around helping each other without socially distancing. Some, but not all, wore masks.

Honduran Deputy Health Minister Roberto Cosenza said more than a quarter of 3,500 rapid tests by local authorities in shelters in San Pedro Sula had come back positive.

“During evacuation, the most important thing was obviously to safeguard people’s lives but they left without masks and had a lot of contact with other people, including some people who had the disease,” Cosenza told local television.

“We’ve had high positive rates in these shelters.”

None of the people in shelters who tested positive have so far required hospitalization, but local hospitals are on high alert, added Cosenza.

As of Monday, there were 55,435 people in 535 shelters across Honduras, government data showed, with the majority in the Valle de Sula where San Pedro de Sula is located.

Cortes, the region where most shelters are located, is Honduras’ hardest-hit by the coronavirus. It has registered 27.7 percent of infections and 29.9 percent of COVID-19 deaths in the country.

Overall, Honduras had registered 103,488 coronavirus infections and 2,389 deaths as of Wednesday.

Aid workers say residents fleeing flood waters have few good options.

“Nowhere here is adequate,” said Pastor Jorge Escobar, whose church in San Pedro Sula took in several vulnerable families. “What people are looking for now is a roof over their heads, some place safe.”

Escobar said people’s main concern is where their next meal would come from, rather than the coronavirus.

Image: Residents rest at a shelter for people affected by the floods caused by heavy rain brought by Storm Iota, in San Pedro Sula
Residents rest at a shelter for people affected by the floods caused by heavy rain brought by Storm Iota, in San Pedro Sula, Honduras on Nov. 19, 2020.Jorge Cabrera / Reuters

Felipe Del Cid, an operations manager at the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, said a surge in new coronavirus cases is now a real possibility.

“Even though there are guidelines as to how many people can be in one space... given the sheer scale of the emergency it’s very difficult for the population and these institutions to follow them.”

Inside a church’s hastily rearranged community area, pictures sent by the pastor to Reuters showed families had draped blankets over benches to sleep, with little distance between one another.

A toddler in a diaper was playing on the small mattress he shared with his mother and elder sister, all unable to take anything other then the clothes they were wearing when flood waters inundated their home.

Elsewhere, a large space once used for church services was completely flooded. It had been converted into an emergency shelter after the first hurricane struck - only to get flooded days later by the second one.

Above a podium, with parts of the slogan torn down, large white letters still read: ‘2020, the year of faith.’

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