Plane Carrying American Evacuees From China Amid Coronavirus Outbreak Diverted to California Air Base

Zachary Stieber
By Zachary Stieber
January 29, 2020COVID-19
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Plane Carrying American Evacuees From China Amid Coronavirus Outbreak Diverted to California Air Base
An airplane, background, carrying U.S. citizens being evacuated from Wuhan, China, makes a refueling stop at the north terminal at Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport in Anchorage, Alaska on the evening of Jan. 28, 2020. (Bill Roth/Anchorage Daily News via AP)

A plane carrying around 200 American citizens who were evacuated from Wuhan, China—where the new coronavirus outbreak started—was diverted to March Air Reserve Base in Riverside County, California, late Jan. 28.

The Boeing 747 stopped at a private terminal at Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport in Alaska before taking off to its final destination.

The plane was slated to land at Ontario International Airport, about 35 miles east of Los Angeles, but was diverted by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).

Curt Hagman, chairman of the San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors and a commissioner at Ontario airport, said that CDC officials alerted him to the diversion.

“Ontario International is one of the repatriation airports for the West Coast and we are always prepared to receive our citizens abroad in times of emergencies,” Hagman said in a video. “We were prepared but the state department decided to switch the flight to March Air Force Base for logistics that they have.”

alaska-airport
The north terminal at Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport in Anchorage, Alaska, where a flight plane carrying U.S. citizens being evacuated from Wuhan, China, landed on Jan. 28, 2020, before taking off to California. (Mark Thiessen/AP Photo)

Those logistics weren’t clear. The CDC didn’t immediately return a request for comment.

Representatives of the city of Ontario were told by representatives of the CDC that the flight was diverted, the city said in a statement late Tuesday. “This is all the information we have at this time,” it said.

San Bernardino County said in an earlier statement that the plane would be carrying up to 240 U.S. citizens, including nine children. The Ontario airport “was designated by the federal government as the official repatriation center for California about a decade ago, and various county departments have participated in numerous comprehensive repatriation exercises with state and federal agencies during the past several years to ensure the county and all other agencies are prepared for this type of event,” the county stated.

The aircraft occupants consisted entirely of U.S. citizens, including American contractors and State Department employees.

“The aircraft will first arrive in Alaska, where occupants will be examined by personnel from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. No occupants who present symptoms of illness will be allowed to proceed into the continental United States. Upon arrival in the continental U.S., possibly ONT, aircraft occupants will again be screened by CDC personnel and monitored for up to two weeks,” it said.

NTD Photo
Medical staff in protective suits treat a patient with pneumonia caused by the new coronavirus at the Zhongnan Hospital of Wuhan University, in Wuhan, China, on Jan. 28, 2020. (China Daily via Reuters)

Officials were ready to house the evacuees in a space at the airport.

The CDC said in an earlier statement that the passengers “will be screened before they take off; monitored during the duration of the flight by medical personnel on board; screened again on landing to refuel in Anchorage, Alaska; monitored on the last leg of the flight by medical personnel on board; evaluated upon arrival at March Air Reserve Base … and then monitored for symptoms post-arrival.”

Anyone who showed symptoms in any of the screenings before landing at the base wouldn’t be allowed on board, officials said.

Alaska officials said all 201 passengers on board passed medical screening and continued onto California.

“For many of us directly involved, this has been a moving and uplifting experience,” said Alaska’s Chief Medical Officer Dr. Anne Zink in a statement (pdf).

“The whole plane erupted in cheers when the crew said, ‘Welcome home to the United States.’ It is easy to stay focused on all that we had to do in a short period of time to prepare and respond, but at the end of the day, this mission was about people. It was about American citizens, some of whom were working to serve our country. It was about families, and it was about helping each other in a time of need.”

Several countries evacuated citizens from Wuhan even as the World Health Organization claimed that evacuations weren’t necessary. Japan, Australia, and South Korea also sent planes to evacuate passengers from the epicenter of the virus.

NTD Photo
A Japanese chartered plane carrying evacuees from Wuhan, China, landed at Haneda international airport in Tokyo on Jan. 29, 2020. (Eugene Hoshiko/AP Photo)

Six Americans have tested positive for the virus; two in California, two in Washington state, one in Arizona, and one in Illinois. All six traveled to Wuhan.

Asymptomatic transfer has been reported in other countries but U.S. health officials said on Jan. 28 that they haven’t been able to confirm the transfer, noting China hasn’t made certain data available for examination.

Over a dozen other countries have confirmed cases, including Canada, France, and Thailand. At least three foreigners—two from Australia and one from Pakistan—have contracted the coronavirus in China, deputy head of the Guangdong Health Commission Chen Zhusheng said on Jan. 29.

British Airways and All Nippon Airways, a Japanese airline, suspended flights to China.

There were reports that the U.S. government was considering suspending flights from China amid the outbreak. Health Secretary Alex Azar said that the option is on the table but a final decision hasn’t been made yet.

Azar told reporters on Tuesday that screening would be expanded from five to 20 airports as officials continued to assess the rapidly evolving situation.

From The Epoch Times

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