Trump activates National Guard in 3 hardest-hit states
The FEMA has been directed to deliver four federal medical stations with 1,000 beds to New York, eight federal medical stations with 2,000 beds to California, and three federal medical stations and three smaller medical stations with 1,000 beds to Washington, according to the President.
By : migrator
Update: 2020-03-23 04:01 GMT
Washington
US President Donald Trump has activated the National Guard in three of the hardest-hit states by the coronavirus pandemic in an effort to curb the further spread of the virus.
The governors of the states of New York, California and Washington "will be in command" of the missions, and the costs will be covered by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Xinhua news agency quoted Trump as saying at a White House press conference.
The FEMA has been directed to deliver four federal medical stations with 1,000 beds to New York, eight federal medical stations with 2,000 beds to California, and three federal medical stations and three smaller medical stations with 1,000 beds to Washington, according to the President.
The supplies will arrive in New York and California within 48 hours, with two navy hospital ships expected to be put into operation on the West Coast and East Coast, respectively, Trump added.
The president has also invoked the Defense Production Act to boost production of masks and public health items that have become critical amid the pandemic, but was yet to actually move on that front despite mounting calls for him to take action.
Washington state reported the first confirmed cases and deaths during the early days of the spread of the coronavirus in the US.
It was later surpassed by New York state, which has now become the epicentre of the outbreak in the country.
California, the nation's most populous state, has ordered all of its residents to stay at home so as to slow the spread of the contagious disease.
Confirmed cases and fatalities both continued to surge nationwide, reaching 33,276 and 417, respectively, according to the latest data from Johns Hopkins University.
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