(Recasts story, adds comments from health ministry)

By Sofia Menchu

GUATEMALA CITY, April 18 (Reuters) - Thirty-two Guatemalan migrants on a deportation flight from the United States earlier this week have now tested positive for the coronavirus, according to the Central American nation's health ministry.

"One of them tested positive on Monday, 12 yesterday and 19 today," health ministry spokeswoman Ana Lucia Gudiel told Reuters. Four deportees on a flight in March also tested positive for the virus.

The Trump administration has pressured Guatemala to keep receiving deported migrants despite growing concerns returnees are bringing the virus with them and could infect remote communities.

Guatemala's migration institute could not confirm which of two deportation flights that arrived on Monday carried the infected passengers.

However, the institute said one of those flights came from Alexandria, Louisiana, where 13 U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) workers at an airfield holding center for migrants tested positive for the virus.

It is not clear where the deportees contracted the infection.

The United States said on Thursday the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had sent a mission to assess the situation and test the migrants, who remain in quarantine in a hospital.

Guatemala temporarily suspended flights deporting migrants from the United States on Thursday after reports of the mass infection.

There have been 30 confirmed cases of COVID-19 among ICE staff working in the agency's detention centers, including those at the Alexandria Staging Facility in Louisiana, ICE data shows. (Reporting by Sofia Menchu; Writing by Anthony Esposito; Editing by Sandra Maler and Sam Holmes)

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