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Coronavirus hits rich and poor unequally in Latin America

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) - From Mexico City to Port-au-Prince, Haiti, and Santiago, Chile, the coronavirus is taking root in the world's most unequal region, where many of Latin America's first cases arrived with members of the elite returning from vacations or work trips to Europe and the United States.

Many of the wealthy are already recovering, but experts warn that the virus could kill scores of the poorest people, who must work every day to feed their families, live in unsanitary conditions and lack proper medical care. Some countries are making payments to informal workers - maids, street sellers and others who have been told to stay home to reduce the spread of the virus, but the effort is patchwork and doesn't apply to everyone who needs help.

'œI stay home, I will lose all my goods. I have no way to save them,'ť said Marie-Ange Bouzi, who sells tomatoes and onions on the street of Haiti's capital. 'œI am not going to spend money fighting corona. God is going to protect me.'ť

Haiti, the Western Hemisphere's poorest country, reported its first two cases of the virus on March 20. One was imported by one of its most successful artists, an R&B singer who had just returned from France, according to the director of health in Port-au-Prince.

Singer Roody Roodboy, who's real name is Roody Pétuel Dauphin, quarantined himself when he got back to avoid infecting others and sent his entourage to be tested, manager Narcisse Fievre said. He said the singer had received death threats from people who accuse him of bringing the disease to Haiti, although there is no evidence Dauphin had infected anyone else.

For hundreds of thousands of Haitians who earn a few dollars a day selling goods on the street, quarantine like Dauphin's would mean near-starvation.

'~'People are not going stay home. How are they going to eat?'ť Bouzi said. 'œHaiti isn't structured for that.''

The Haitian government has cut banking and government office hours, closed schools and broadcast radio messages asking people to stay home. But thousands in Port-au-Prince still crowded this week into street markets, buses and repurposed pickup trucks known as tap-taps.

In Chile, which has seen cases grow to more than 2500 since March 3, many coronavirus diagnoses have been in upper-middle-class neighborhoods, in people just back from Europe, particularly Italy.

Health Minister Jaime Mañalich has complained that wealthy residents of the Las Condes and Vitacura sections of Santiago, the capital, are routinely violating required quarantines after they tested positive or encountered someone who did.

Las Condes Mayor Joaquín Lavín says more than half the cases in the city are in Las Condes and Vitacura.

The health minister says he has personally called wealthy residents supposedly in quarantine and discovers they are defying the order.

"You hear honking and street noises, which tells me they're fooling us and disrespecting the quarantine,'ť Mañalich said.

Mexican authorities say at least 17 of the country's wealthiest people returned after being infected during a ski trip to Vail, Colorado.

The first person to die in Rio state was Cleonice Gonçalves, a 63-year-old who worked as a maid for a woman in Leblon, one of the wealthiest neighborhoods in Brazil. The woman of the household was infected during a trip to Italy but Gonçalves' family members said she wasn't informed her boss was in isolation awaiting test results, according to Camila Ramos de Miranda, health secretary for the town of Miguel Pereira. Gonçalves, who had hypertension and diabetes, fell ill and died on March 17 in Miguel Pereira two hours north of the capital.

'œI know we need to work, need our daily bread, but nothing is more important than the value of a life,'ť Miguel Pereira Mayor André Português said in a video posted on Facebook.

In Lima, Peru, the fallout from the pandemic is starkly different depending on class.

Nadia Muñoz watched her 8-year-old son, Luka, follow online lessons from his private Catholic school on a recent afternoon. The makeup artist and her family live in an upper-middle-class neighborhood, where Lima's 15-day quarantine hasn't been too disruptive.

'œWe have a supermarket nearby, light, water, internet, a phone and cable TV,'ť Muñoz said as she recorded a makeup lesson to post on Instagram.

In a shack on a nearby hill, Alejandro de la Cruz, 86, his wife María Zoila, and his son Ramiro, who sold clothes on the street until the quarantine started this month, were cooking with charcoal. They have no running water, electricity, internet or phone service.

They live among security guards, cooks, drivers, tailors, shoemakers, car mechanics and construction workers who are unemployed during the lockdown.

While there are more poor people in other regions of the world, Latin America remains the region in which the greatest proportion of wealth is held by a small number of citizens.

'œLatin America is the most unequal region in the entire world. We're talking about class disparities that are unlike anywhere else on the planet," said Geoff Ramsey, a researcher at the Washington Office on Latin America.

Some Latin American governments were striving to help workers whose informal jobs provide them no access to the social safety net, including unemployment payments or severance packages.

Peru has announced a payment of $108 for the 2.7 million homes classified as poverty stricken. But the hillside shanty where de la Cruz and his unemployed neighbors are waiting out the quarantine aren't poor enough to qualify.

"My son hasn't worked for a week, there's barely enough to buy a bit of food,'' Zoila said.

In Argentina, the center-left government approved a $151 payment in April for informal workers, who make up 35% of the nation's economy. Argentina plans to make more payments soon.

Brazil's right-wing government has no such plans. On Twitter last week, left-leaning politicians called for maids to receive their salaries while self-isolating, adding the hashtag #PaidQuarantineNow.

The lack of help worries Patricia Martins, who lives in Brazil's largest favela, or slum, Rocinha in Rio de Janeiro, which houses about 70,000 people in brick homes packed tightly together on steep slopes overlooking the Atlantic Ocean. Clean water is sporadic, sewage often runs in the streets and winding alleys and soaring staircases make it difficult for medical professionals to retrieve a sick person in an emergency.

'œMy concern is that if someone gets that sickness, this is going to be a focal point, like it's a focal point for tuberculosis and for HIV,'ť said Martins, a 45-year-old cleaning woman.

'œThe person who's a cleaner, the person who counts on that money to survive, to sustain their family - they're going to bring in money from where?'ť she said of anti-virus measures. 'œIf everything stops, it will end people's lives! There will be nothing people can do to survive!'ť

___

Weissenstein reported from Havana and Briceño from Lima, Peru. Eva Vergara in Santiago, Chile; Maria Verza in Mexico City; David Biller in Rio de Janeiro; and Almudena Calatrava in Buenos Aires contributed to this report.

In this March 20, 2020 photo, Nadia Muñoz helps her son Luka with his online lessons from a private Catholic school, at their home in an upper-middle-class neighborhood of Lima, Peru. For the makeup artist and her family, Lima's near-total 15-day quarantine hasn't been too disruptive. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia) The Associated Press
In this March 20, 2020 photo, Luka Espinoza watches TV in his room in Lima, Peru, during a lockdown due to the new coronavirus. For the upper-middle class, Lima's 15-day quarantine hasn't been too disruptive. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia) The Associated Press
FILE - In this March 13, 2020 file photo, a worker fills a container with water from a water truck at the Villa Maria del Triunfo shantytown in Lima, Peru. The poor who live in the hills of Peru's capital, for whom a basic supply of clean water is a daily struggle, are finding it hard to meet the basic hygiene recommendations by health officials to avoid contracting the new coronavirus: Wash your hands for at least 20 seconds. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this March 19, 2020 file photo, a porter nods off over his dolly at a street market in Lima, Peru, the fourth day of a state of emergency decreed by the government due to the new coronavirus outbreak. Many of the wealthy are already recovering from coronavirus and experts are warning that the virus could kill untold numbers in the poorest sectors of society, where not working means not eating, people live packed together and few have access to healthcare, let alone sophisticated medical care. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this March 20, 2020 file photo, police detain two street vendors to evict them from the train station in Santiago, Chile, after the government ordered businesses to close and street vendors to go home as a precaution against the spread of the new coronavirus. Many of the wealthy are already recovering from coronavirus and experts are warning that the virus could kill untold numbers in the poorest sectors of society, where not working means not eating. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this March 14, 2020 file photo, a Venezuelan woman is carried across a river to Colombia from Venezuela, near the Simon Bolivar International Bridge in La Parada near Cucuta, Colombia. Colombian President Ivan Duque ordered the nation's border with Venezuela closed as a coronavirus containment measure. (AP Photo/Antonio Ospina, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this March 13, 2020 file photo, a taxi driver wears a protective mask as he drives tourists in his classic American car in Havana, Cuba. Across Latin America, coronavirus is taking root in the world's most unequal region. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this March 24, 2020 file photo, a man rides his bike through an empty Chapultepec park in Mexico City. Many countries in Latin American and the Caribbean saw their first cases of novel coronavirus arrive with jetsetting members of the elite returning from vacations or work trips to Europe and the United States. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this March 18, 2020 file photo, doctors protest for more physicians and better working conditions, to deal the new coronavirus, outside the Health Ministry in La Paz, Bolivia. The sign at center reads in Spanish: "Rural areas urgently need more personnel. Don't hurt us." (AP Photo/Juan Karita, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this March 20, 2020 file photo, a senior citizen peers from his window through a web of electric wires in the Rocinha slum of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, amid orders to stay home to contain the spread of the coronavirus. In Rocinha, narrow alleyways reduce airflow around homes packed tightly together; clean water is scarce, sewage often runs in the streets and winding alleys and soaring staircases make it difficult for medical professionals to retrieve an ailing patient in case of emergency. (AP Photo/Silvia Izquierdo) The Associated Press
FILE - In this March 24, 2020 file photo, people line up at a government office for national identification cards, before it potentially closes amid measures to contain the spread of the new coronavirus in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. The Haitian government has cut banking and government office hours, closed schools and was broadcasting radio messages asking people to stay home. (AP Photo/Dieu Nalio Chery, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this March 24, 2020 file photo, a girl holds her doll in an alley of the Rocinha slum of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, amid orders to stay home to contain the spread of the coronavirus. In Rocinha, narrow alleyways reduce airflow around homes packed tightly together; clean water is scarce, sewage often runs in the streets and winding alleys and soaring staircases make it difficult for medical professionals to retrieve an ailing patient in case of emergency. (AP Photo/Leo Correa, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this March 22, 2020 file photo, the relative of an inmate cries as she speaks on the phone outside La Modelo jail in Bogota, Colombia. Violence broke out in the prison out of inmates' fears that authorities are not doing enough to prevent coronavirus inside overcrowded prisons. (AP Photo/Ivan Valencia, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this March 16, 2020 file photo, a supermarket cashier waits for costumers behind a plastic curtain as a precaution against the spread of the new coronavirus, in Buenos Aires, Argentina. From Mexico City to Port-au-Prince to Buenos Aires, coronavirus is taking root in the world's most unequal region. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this March 17, 2020 file photo, a man gets some exercise along the seaside in Montevideo, Uruguay. Many countries in Latin American and the Caribbean saw their first cases of novel coronavirus arrive with jetsetting members of the elite returning from vacations or work trips to Europe and the United States. (AP Photo/Matilde Campodonico, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this March 20, 2020 file photo, Kaqchikel indigenous women pray toward a statue of Jesus outside a Catholic church that was closed to help stop the spread of the new coronavirus in San Martin Jilotepeque, Guatemala. Many of the wealthy in Latin America are already recovering from coronavirus and experts are warning that the virus could kill untold numbers in the poorest sectors of society, where not working means not eating, people live packed together and few have access to healthcare, let alone sophisticated medical care. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this March 23, 2020 file photo, David Vazquez, a street performer dressed as the Joker, waits in hopes of pedestrians who will pay to take pictures with him in Mexico City. Vazquez, who also worked as a trainer in a gym until it shut down today, said business for street performers has plummeted, with the few clients still stopping opting to take their pictures from a distance or posing beside him awkwardly, amid the worldwide spread of the new coronavirus. "We have to pay rent, light, gas, telephone," said Vazquez. "Where will we get that money? We all want to work." (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell, File) The Associated Press
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