Photorealistic depiction of the MV Hondius cruise ship docking in Tenerife for passenger evacuations due to hantavirus.
Photorealistic depiction of the MV Hondius cruise ship docking in Tenerife for passenger evacuations due to hantavirus.
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MV Hondius cruise ship with hantavirus heads to Tenerife for evacuations

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Spain's government authorized the MV Hondius cruise ship to dock in Tenerife after a hantavirus outbreak that killed three people. Passenger evacuations will begin on May 11 and European Union countries will repatriate their citizens.

The MV Hondius cruise ship left Cabo Verde on Wednesday and is sailing toward the Canary Islands. Spain's government announced the vessel will reach Tenerife within three days.

Health Minister Mónica García confirmed a joint sanitary evaluation mechanism will start. All passengers will remain on board until their repatriation flights, unless their medical condition prevents it.

The World Health Organization verified five hantavirus cases, including the Andes strain. Three symptomatic passengers were evacuated to the Netherlands and Germany in ambulance planes.

The Granadilla de Abona city council requested sanitary guarantees and transparency before docking. Local authorities will coordinate with the Canary Islands government.

Hvad folk siger

Initial reactions on X focus on MV Hondius docking in Tenerife for hantavirus evacuations after three deaths. News accounts and users share factual updates on cases, international monitoring by WHO/CDC/EU, repatriation plans, and ship itinerary from South America. Some note local Canary Islands opposition to docking, virus details like Andes strain transmission risks, and recent evacuations. Sentiments are mostly neutral-informative with limited skepticism or personal opinions.

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Photorealistic image of the MV Hondius cruise ship arriving at Tenerife port with medical teams in protective gear, for a news article on the hantavirus response.
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Spain to host hantavirus cruise ship in Tenerife after WHO request

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The Spanish government has confirmed that the MV Hondius cruise ship, carrying a hantavirus outbreak, will dock in Tenerife within three days. The decision follows a formal request from the World Health Organization. Foreign passengers will be repatriated and the 14 Spaniards will quarantine in Madrid.

A day-long operation to repatriate passengers and crew from the MV Hondius cruise ship struck by hantavirus neared completion late Sunday with 94 people flown home from Spain’s Canary Islands. Three passengers have died from the outbreak that began after the vessel departed Argentina in April. Health officials stressed the risk to the public remains low.

Rapporteret af AI

The MV Hondius cruise ship with a hantavirus outbreak on board is heading to the Canary Islands where it will arrive this weekend. Three people have died and there are at least nine suspected cases confirmed or under investigation. Spain is coordinating the disembarkation and quarantine of passengers.

Four German passengers from the cruise ship Hondius, affected by a Hantavirus outbreak, landed in the Netherlands on Sunday evening. They will be taken to Frankfurt and then placed in home quarantine.

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Spanish health authorities confirmed on Monday the first positive hantavirus case in a Spanish national evacuated from the MV Hondius cruise ship. The asymptomatic patient, reported in good condition, awaits a confirmatory test while isolated at Madrid's Gómez Ulla hospital.

Two French passengers on the MV Hondius described their near-normal daily life aboard the ship under international health alert, following three deaths reported since April 11.

Rapporteret af AI

The Ministry of Health has issued a public health advisory following a hantavirus outbreak linked to the cruise ship MV Hondius. The World Health Organisation confirmed eight cases and three deaths among passengers and crew as of May 7. No cases have been reported in Kenya and the risk to the public remains low.

 

 

 

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