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The MV Hondius cruise ship Alamy Stock Photo

Hantavirus-hit cruise ship to finally dock in the Netherlands with skeleton crew aboard

Spain allowed the vessel to anchor off its Canary Islands for the evacuation of passengers and crew.

A CRUISE SHIP that sparked global alarm after a deadly outbreak of hantavirus will end its voyage in Rotterdam today, with its remaining skeleton crew facing weeks of quarantine.

The MV Hondius is expected to dock in the Dutch port between 10am and midday, according to officials, before disembarking the 27 remaining people on board: 25 crew and two medical staff.

The ship, operated by Dutch company Oceanwide Expeditions, made headlines after three passengers died from hantavirus – a rare virus for which no vaccines nor specific treatments exist.

The World Health Organization has scrambled to reassure the world that the outbreak was not a repeat of the Covid pandemic, stressing that contagion was very rare.

“There is no sign that we are seeing the start of a larger outbreak,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told reporters on 12 May.

However, the virus has an incubation period of several weeks, meaning more cases from the ship’s occupants could emerge in the future, Tedros warned.

Hantavirus has been confirmed in six patients, with one other probable case, according to an AFP tally from official sources.

Another patient in Canada has provisionally tested positive but is not exhibiting symptoms and the test remains to be confirmed.

Hospitalisations 

After arriving in the Canary Islands on 10 May, more than 120 passengers and crew were evacuated from the ship, either to their home countries or to the Netherlands, which has a special responsibility as the ship is Dutch-flagged.

A 65-year-old French woman became symptomatic on the repatriation flight and ended up in critical condition in a Paris hospital with a confirmed case of hantavirus.

Two people, one Dutch and one British, were also urgently evacuated from the ship to the Netherlands and rushed to hospital.

Both are in stable condition and the Briton is well enough to return home for self-isolation, according to Dutch officials.

All others evacuated to the Netherlands from the ship have tested negative for the virus. Some are in quarantine in the Netherlands, others have already flown home.

Everyone still on board is asymptomatic, according to Oceanwide Expeditions, and are being closely monitored by the two medics on board.

Late on Sunday, the WHO said it was maintaining its assessment of the hantavirus outbreak as “low risk”.

“While additional cases may still occur among passengers and crew members exposed before containment measures were implemented, the risk of onward transmission is expected to be reduced following disembarkation and the implementation of control measures,” it said.

Andes strain 

The people disembarking on Monday comprise 17 from the Philippines, four from the Netherlands (two crew and the two medical staff), four from Ukraine, one from Russia and one from Poland.

Some of them will stay in quarantine facilities at the port, while others will self-isolate at home.

Also on board is the body of a German woman who died during the voyage.

After docking, the ship will undergo thorough cleaning and disinfection procedures, according to the operator.

The details are still being finalised, but the cleaning will start upon arrival, said Oceanwide Expeditions.

The MV Hondius’s voyage began on 1 April in Ushuaia, Argentina, taking in some remote islands in the South Atlantic Ocean before steaming north to Cape Verde.

The trip was supposed to finish there, but the ship eventually sailed to Tenerife, in the Canary Islands, for the evacuations by plane.

The MV Hondius presented diplomatic challenges as different countries negotiated over who would receive it and treat its passengers.

Cape Verde refused to take the ship, which remained anchored offshore of the capital Praia as three people were evacuated to Europe by air.

Spain allowed the vessel to anchor off its Canary Islands for the evacuation of passengers and crew, but the Atlantic archipelago’s regional government fiercely opposed the measure.

Hantavirus spreads from the urine, faeces and saliva of infected rodents and is endemic in Argentina, where the voyage began.

Those infected have the Andes virus – the only strain of hantavirus that can spread between people.

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