Public health emergency declared for US troops stationed across Djibouti base cluster


Public health emergency declared for US troops stationed across Djibouti base cluster

A public health emergency due to COVID-19 has been declared for several thousand U.S. troops spread across the Djibouti base cluster which houses thousands of American service members.

U.S. Army Maj. Gen. Michael D. Turello, commander of Combined Joint Task Force-Horn of Africa, declared a public health emergency Thursday for American forces under his command spread across the Djibouti base cluster, CJTF-HOA announced in a release.

The public health emergency applies to defense personnel, contractors and U.S. troops spread across Camp Lemonnier Djibouti, Chabelley Airfield and the port of Djibouti, the release detailed

Camp Lemonnier is the largest U.S. installation in Africa, which houses roughly 3,000 American troops. There are roughly 6,000 U.S. troops across the AFRICOM area of responsibility, according to details in an inspector general report released in February.

“Combating COVID-19 is my top priority,” Turello said in the release. “By declaring a public health emergency, it keeps our forces, and those of our host nation partner, as healthy and as safe as possible.”

The announcement of the public health emergency raises questions about the readiness of forward deployed U.S. forces in the AFRICOM theater of operation as Djibouti represents the largest concentration of American troops in the region.

But Maj. Karl Wiest, a spokesman for AFRICOM, said there has only been one case of COVID-19 in Djibouti, and that was a contractor.