Stranded Overseas, People Ask: Why Weren’t We Warned Sooner?

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Stranded Overseas, People Ask: Why Weren’t We Warned Sooner?

NEW DELHI — Ana Pautler, a trekker from San Francisco, was partway up a Himalayan mountain path in Nepal when she observed one thing peculiar: indi


NEW DELHI — Ana Pautler, a trekker from San Francisco, was partway up a Himalayan mountain path in Nepal when she observed one thing peculiar: individuals have been turning round.

As fears of the coronavirus unfold all over the world, German hikers advised Ms. Pautler on March 17 that their embassy had suggested them to return to Kathmandu, the capital, and was discussing flying individuals out. Israeli vacationers have been doing the identical factor, she mentioned, spurred on by messages to go away.

However Ms. Pautler, 32, who has been dwelling in China, obtained no such alert from the State Division’s journey advisory system till March 23, although she was signed up for normal updates.

By that time, Nepal’s worldwide airspace had already been closed for a day, following comparable shutdowns all around the world, and her flight out had been canceled.

Diane Gallina, 68, from Long Island, N.Y., was frantically worried about her daughter, who she said was holed up alone in a hotel in Lima and feeling despondent.

“She told me the Canadians got out,” she said through sobs. “How come Canada can get their people out?”

Some tourists pointed out that communication had been far smoother with the embassy once it became clear that the United States was also going into lockdown mode. Parts of Europe, for instance, were initially reporting higher cases of the coronavirus than the United States, a possible reason for why they urged citizens to leave Nepal days earlier.

The extraordinary challenge of evacuating Americans from far-flung corners of the world at the same time has overwhelmed diplomats.

Alarm bells sounded more than two weeks ago, when European nations started contacting their citizens.

On March 17, as stringent lockdowns started rippling around the world, the German Embassy warned citizens of flight disruptions on their Facebook page and urged them to contact their airlines. Over the next week and a half, Germany and France organized flights to take out hundreds of people, including citizens of Finland, Austria, Denmark and Belgium.

As Europeans were receiving early warnings to leave, John Arns, 47, who lives in the San Francisco Bay Area, tried to get information about what the American government was doing. But all he could find on the embassy’s Facebook page was information about proper hand-washing techniques and Women’s History Month.

“I am incredibly disappointed with the embassy’s response,” he said.

Some Americans stuck in Nepal said they were being pointed out and called “corona” when they stepped outside of their hostels. The perception among some South Asians is that foreigners are responsible for importing the virus; Nepal has just six confirmed cases, including one person who has recovered.

“The Nepalis here are afraid of us,” said Stacy Kim, 58, from Santa Cruz, Calif., who was stranded in a remote town near the country’s border with India. “When we try to buy food they are scared we are exposing them to the virus and try to get us to go away.”

Even in Kathmandu, tourists said they were worried about the logistics of something as basic as reaching the airport. The police have threatened people on the streets.

Raj Gyawali, who is part of a government crisis committee helping tourists during the lockdown, said the Europeans — except for the British — had been highly proactive in getting their citizens out.

“To speak frankly, they seemed so organized,” he said.

And the Americans?

“I don’t know why they are delaying,” he said.

It was not until March 26 that the State Department issued their first notice about a possible evacuation flight. Five days later, 302 Americans left Nepal for Washington.

In a video message, the ambassador, Randy Berry, said the flight was the result of “hundreds of hours of coordination and cooperation.

At a Tuesday information briefing, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo urged People “to work your approach again right here,” saying he couldn’t assure “the U.S. authorities’s potential to rearrange constitution flights indefinitely the place industrial choices not exist.”

However as People have watched medical personnel load our bodies onto refrigerated vehicles and the USA stories extra circumstances than wherever else on the earth, some are having second ideas about attempting to go away on one other evacuation flight.

Amy Sellmyer, 34, from Oklahoma, who has labored in Nepal and constructed a life there, felt she was higher off staying put.

“I’m not planning to go,” she mentioned.

Kai Schultz reported from New Delhi, and Bhadra Sharma from Kathmandu, Nepal. Lara Jakes contributed reporting from Washington.





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