Suspected Ebola patient placed in Equatorial Guinea hotel with deportees from the US, lawyers say
Lawyers say 17 U.S. deportees were held without masks or disinfectants as medical staff brought suspected Ebola patients into the same hotel.
- Migrants deported from the U.S. and detained in an Equatorial Guinea hotel say authorities are housing suspected Ebola patients there. The facility, owned by President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, holds 17 migrants from Angola, Mauritania, and Ethiopia.
- Under a $7.5 million deal with the Trump administration, President Obiang converted his family-owned hotel on Bioko island into a detention center. The 17 detainees hold U.S. court orders that should have protected them from removal to their home countries.
- Medical personnel in hazmat suits brought a man suspected of having Ebola to the hotel last week, followed by a woman on Sunday. Detainees report receiving no masks, disinfectants, or information about exposure risks while held in the facility.
- Earlier this month, a coalition of international lawyers filed a case against Equatorial Guinea before Africa's top human rights body, accusing the nation of forcing deportees home and denying detainees adequate medical care.
- Equatorial Guinea, wealthy from oil resources, faces State Department accusations of human rights abuses and corruption. Despite these concerns, U.S. businesses remain major investors, and the nation's military receives training funding from the government.
20 Articles
20 Articles
Migrants deported from the United States and held in a hotel in Equatorial Guinea claim that the authorities there have also used the facility to quarantine at least one patient suspected of Ebola, the deportees and their lawyers said today. The hotel, located on a tropical island off the coast of the country and owned by powerful President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, is being used to accommodate 17 migrants from countries such as Angola, Mau…
DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — Migrants deported from the United States and held in a hotel in Equatorial Guinea claim that authorities there have also used the facility to quarantine at least one patient suspected of Ebola, they said...
Suspected Ebola patient placed in Equatorial Guinea hotel with deportees from the US, lawyers say
Migrants deported from the U.S. and detained in a hotel in Equatorial Guinea say authorities have used the facility to quarantine a suspected Ebola patient.
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