MV Hondius cruise ship stranded off Cape Verde over possible hantavirus outbreak

The MV Hondius cruise ship, carrying 149 people including 14 Spaniards, remains anchored off Praia's coast in Cape Verde. Local authorities have denied docking due to fears of a hantavirus outbreak that has caused three deaths. Operator Oceanwide Expeditions is considering ports in Las Palmas or Tenerife as alternatives.

The MV Hondius departed on March 20 from Tierra del Fuego in Argentine Patagonia, bound for the Canary Islands. On April 11, a passenger died on board; the body disembarked on April 24 in Saint Helena, accompanied by his Dutch wife, who also died later. On April 27, a British passenger was evacuated critically ill to Johannesburg, where hantavirus was confirmed. On May 2, another German passenger died on board.

Currently, two crew members—one British and one Dutch—have acute respiratory symptoms and require urgent medical attention. The World Health Organization (WHO) states that laboratory tests, epidemiological investigations, and virus sequencing are underway. "The risk to the general public is low. There is no need to panic or impose travel restrictions," the WHO assures.

Cape Verde denied docking in Praia to "protect national public health," in line with the International Health Regulations. Oceanwide Expeditions has ordered passengers to stay in cabins. Spain's Ministry of Health states that "current evidence points to infection on the vessel itself".

Canary Islands Government Delegation sources confirm coordination with External Health ahead of a possible arrival. Spain's Embassy in Cape Verde is monitoring for consular assistance. No contact yet with Las Palmas or Tenerife port authorities.

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Photorealistic depiction of the MV Hondius cruise ship docking in Tenerife for passenger evacuations due to hantavirus.
Bild generiert von KI

MV Hondius cruise ship with hantavirus heads to Tenerife for evacuations

Von KI berichtet Bild generiert von KI

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.

A hantavirus outbreak has been confirmed on the MV Hondius cruise ship, resulting in three deaths. The vessel, which departed Ushuaia on April 1, is heading to Tenerife where passengers will begin evacuation on Monday.

Von KI berichtet

Three people have died from a hantavirus outbreak on the Dutch-flagged cruise ship MV Hondius, anchored off Cape Verde. Seven infections have been confirmed among the 147 passengers and crew on board. The World Health Organization was notified on May 2 about the cluster of severe respiratory illnesses.

The cruise ship with the hantavirus outbreak will not dock in Tenerife; passengers will be transferred by launch for immediate repatriation or quarantine.

Von KI berichtet

The World Health Organization confirms five cases of hantavirus following the outbreak on the cruise ship MV Hondius. Three people have died but the risk of further spread in society is assessed as low.

The World Health Organization has confirmed five cases and three deaths from hantavirus aboard the cruise ship MV Hondius, while stressing that the virus’s limited transmission route makes a wider outbreak unlikely.

Von KI berichtet

The evacuation of passengers from the Hondius ship, amid a hantavirus outbreak, proceeded normally on Sunday at Granadilla de Abona port. Ninety-four people of various nationalities left the vessel under WHO and Spanish authorities coordination. Final transfers remain scheduled for Monday.

 

 

 

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