Hantavirus latest: Cruise ship to dock in Tenerife early Sunday as UK sends plane to evacuate passengers

TravelHealth & Fitness
9 May 2026 • 11:43 PM MYT
The Independent
The Independent

The world’s most free-thinking newspaper

Hantavirus latest: Cruise ship to dock in Tenerife early Sunday as UK sends plane to evacuate passengers

The hantavirus-stricken cruise ship is due to arrive in Tenerife early on Sunday, where repatriation flights will be waiting to fly passengers home.

The 22 British passengers on board are expected to be flown back to the UK the same day. It is understood they will be tested on the ship before they disembark and will then be taken directly from the ship to the plane.

On arrival, they will be taken to a hospital in Wirral, Merseyside, for “clinical assessment and testing”, health officials said. They will be held for 72 hours, after which specialists will decide whether they can isolate at home or another suitable location.

Spain's interior minister has confirmed that Germany, France, Belgium, Ireland, and the Netherlands are among the countries also sending planes.

The European ‌Union is sending ‌two further planes for the remaining ⁠European citizens.

The head of the World ⁠Health Organisation arrived in Spain today to join senior ⁠government ​officials overseeing the ⁠evacuation of passengers.

The ship’s expected arrival has been met with protest on the island, as residents fear possible exposure to the virus.

But health officials have emphasised that the public is safe. “So far, the risk for the population of Canary Islands and globally remains low,” WHO director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said.

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Key Points

  • European countries sending planes to collect citizens from hantavirus ship
  • Hantavirus outbreak: Government hopes to fly 22 Britons back to UK on Sunday
  • WHO reacts to fears of a COVID-style hantavirus pandemic
  • A timeline of the cruise ship hantavirus outbreak and when passengers fell sick
  • British passengers will be taken to UK hospital for 'clinical assessment and testing'

In pictures: Protesters demonstrate ahead of the arrival of the hantavirus cruise ship

01:00 , Amy-Clare Martin

Dock workers protest against the arrival of a cruise ship affected by hantavirus in Santa Cruz de Tenerife on Friday (AFP/Getty)A demonstrator holds a placard reading: ‘This not help. This is a botched job.’ (Reuters)Dockers hold banners reading 'without protocol, no safety' as they protest against the arrival of a cruise ship affected by hantavirus (AFP/Getty)

What are the symptoms of hantavirus and how is treated?

23:59 , Amy-Clare Martin

What are the symptoms?

  • Fever
  • Extreme fatigue
  • Muscle aches
  • Stomach pain
  • Nausea
  • Vomiting
  • Diarrhoea
  • Shortness of breath
  • Symptoms usually appear between 2 to 4 weeks after being exposed to the virus, but there are reports of symptoms occurring up to 40 days after exposure.

How is the virus treated?

There is currently no vaccine or specific antiviral treatment for hantavirus infections.

Treatment is supportive and based on symptoms, such as hospital care and respiratory support for breathing difficulties.

'Risk to general public remains very low' - UKHSA

23:43 , Alex Ross

The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) said on Saturday that the risk to the general public “remains very low”.

Professor Robin May, chief scientific officer at UKHSA, said: “We continue to work at pace with our international partners to ensure the safe repatriation of British nationals from the MV Hondius.

“The safety and wellbeing of those on board remains our number one priority. Established infection control measures will be in place at every step of the journey, and passengers will receive full support throughout, including during their period of isolation.”

Watch: Trump says hantavirus situation ‘under very good control’ ahead of Tenerife arrival

23:00 , Amy-Clare Martin

President Donald Trump said the hantavirus outbreak was “under very good control” in comments as the MV Hondius was preparing to dock in Tenerife:

Outbreak caused by couple’s birdwatching trip to landfill site, experts fear

22:00 , Amy-Clare Martin

The deadly outbreak of hantavirus on a cruise ship may have been caused by a Dutch couple contracting the illness during a bird-watching outing in Ushuaia, Argentina, health officials fear.

Two Argentine officials investigating the origins of the outbreak on the ship, which sailed from southern Argentina, said this is now the government’s leading hypothesis.

The Independent’s Alex Croft has the full story:

Image from: Hantavirus latest: Cruise ship to dock in Tenerife early Sunday as UK sends plane to evacuate passengers

Hantavirus cruise ship outbreak ‘possibly caused by couple’s birdwatching trip’

WHO director-general writes letter to reassure 'worried' Tenerife residents

21:00 , Amy-Clare Martin

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has sought to reassure “worried” Tenerife residents they will not encounter passengers of a hantavirus-hit cruise ship set to dock on the island.

The UN agency said there had been six confirmed hantavirus cases linked to the MV Hondius ship and that four patients were currently in hospital.

It added that a total of eight cases, including three deaths, had been reported – with one suspected case being reclassified after testing negative for hantavirus.

The WHO said on Saturday that there were currently no symptomatic passengers on board the ship.

In a letter addressed to the people of Tenerife, WHO director-general Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said he knew residents were “worried”, but added the outbreak was “not another Covid” and the “current public health risk from hantavirus remains low”.

Mapped: The countries affected by the cruise ship Hantavirus outbreak that has killed three people

20:30 , Harriette Boucher

Image from: Hantavirus latest: Cruise ship to dock in Tenerife early Sunday as UK sends plane to evacuate passengers

Mapped: Countries affected by cruise ship Hantavirus outbreak that has killed three

Inside the military-style Tenerife operation to get passengers off the Hantavirus cruise ship

20:00 , Amy-Clare Martin

The plan to offload the remaining 147 passengers and crew on board MV Hondius travelling from Cape Verde to Tenerife has been planned down to the last minute and is also racing against the weather.

Read the full report from Renée Boskaljon in Las Palmas, Gran Canaria:

Image from: Hantavirus latest: Cruise ship to dock in Tenerife early Sunday as UK sends plane to evacuate passengers

Inside the military-style Tenerife operation to evacuate the hantavirus cruise ship

Passengers must disembark before weather turns, officials warn

19:30 , Amy-Clare Martin

The operation to rescue passengers is facing tight window before weather conditions deteriorate.

The ship needs to leave the port by Monday and anyone still on board will have to stay on the ship as it continues its journey to the Netherlands, where it will be disinfected.

Alfonso Cabello, a spokesperson for the government of the Canary Islands, told reporters the operation will begin from dawn but passengers may not start being removed until midday.

"Operations would begin from dawn, once there is enough daylight to start working," he said. "We estimate, though this is a calculation that depends on flight availability and on anchoring a cruise ship of over 100 metres in length, that operations could begin around 12:00 noon."

Cabello stressed that weather conditions will make any manoeuvre impossible from Monday onwards — and with conditions not expected to improve until the end of May, there would be no second chance.

Virginia Barcones, head of civil protection, and Javier Padilla, Spain's secretary of state for health, visit the port of Granadilla de Abona, Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain, where the cruise ship is expected to arrive (Reuters)

30 crew members and body will remain onboard

19:00 , Amy-Clare Martin

Thirty MV Hondius crew members will remain on board to continue the voyage to the Netherlands.

The Dutch authorities will then be responsible for disinfecting the vessel when it reaches port.

The body of a passenger who died on the ship will remain on board throughout the journey to the Netherlands.

The operation to get passengers off the hantavirus hit MV Hondius is due to start (Reuters)

In pictures: The operation to rescue passengers from hantavirus hit cruise ship

18:30 , Amy-Clare Martin

Members of the Guardia Civil begin setting up a tent at an expected reception point for passengers from the MV Hondius at the Granadilla Port on May 09 (Getty)Officials prepare for passenger arrivals in Tenerife (Getty)Workers prepare security measures at the port of Granadilla de Abona (Reuters)

What will happen when the virus-stricken ship arrives?

18:00 , Amy-Clare Martin

The MV Hondius is expected to enter Canarian waters between 3am and 5am in the early hours of Sunday morning and anchor just outside the Port of Granadilla on Tenerife's southeastern coast.

Officials have planned a military-style operation to safely disembark 147 passengers from 22 countries still on board:

  • The Hondius will anchor - not dock - and small vessels will ferry passengers ashore in groups of five into a restricted port area, where health-protected vehicles will be waiting
  • The harbour is 13 minutes drive from the island’s South Airport, where the repatriation flights will depart
  • The 22 British passengers on board are expected to be flown back to the UK the same day, where they will have to self-isolate for 45 days

Arrival of virus-stricken cruise ship to be met with protests

17:30 , Amy-Clare Martin

The arrival of the MV Hondius in the Canary Islands this weekend has caused uproar amongst its residents, who fear the virus will spread to shore.

The authorities have been met by protesters as they make last minute preparations to receive the controversial boat and process those on board.

The ship is expected to enter Canarian waters between 3am and 5am in the early hours of Sunday morning and anchor just outside the Port of Granadilla sits on Tenerife's southeastern coast.

Tensions rose sharply as the ship approached the Islands. Dozens protested in Gran Canaria on Thursday— the neighbouring island, while others gathered in Tenerife on Friday and Saturday.

“We all want passengers to return safely but we are worried how this is going to impact our health, and our businesses, which depend on tourism", says Patricia Fernández Bueno, 44, a holiday rental owner who lives in the town.

There have been protests ahead of the virus-stricken ship’s arrival (AFP/Getty)

Elena Ruiz, spokesperson for the Tenerife port workers' union, told The Independent that around 55 union workers at the port of Granadilla will would not turn up to work on Saturday or Sunday, and islanders will also be gathering at the port in protest.

She said: "What's coming is a biological risk. There is an established protocol for smaller arrivals of migrant boats, but this is on a much larger scale — and there are not sufficient protocols to ensure the safety of those handling the arrival.”

What happens when the MV Hondius arrives in Tenerife?

17:00 , Harriette Boucher

The hantavirus-stricken cruise ship is due to dock in Tenerife on Sunday, and with it, the 140 passengers who have been stuck on the boat for weeks.

Health officials have said they will perform careful evacuations, and passengers will be taken to a “completely isolated, cordoned-off area.”

Both the UK and the US are sending planes to evacuate their citizens from the ship.

Once the vessel reaches Tenerife, passengers will be evacuated in small boats to buses only after their repatriation flights are ready to take them, Spanish officials said Friday.

Passengers will be transported in isolated and guarded vehicles, and the parts of the airport they travel through will be cordoned off.

Their impending arrival has been met with protest on the island, as residents fear for their safety.

But officials have sought to reassure the public in the Canary Islands about possible exposure to the virus among the general population.

Christian Lindmeier, a WHO spokesman, said: “The risk remains absolutely low,” adding: “This is not a new Covid.”

British arrivals will be taken to hospital for 'clinical assessment and testing'

16:24 , Amy-Clare Martin

British passengers and crew arriving from the hantavirus struck cruise ship will be taken to a hospital for “clinical assessment and testing, health chiefs have confirmed.

They will be held for 72 hours, after which specialists will decide whether they can isolate at home or another suitable location.

A joint statement from NHS England North West, NHS Cheshire and Merseyside ICB, Merseyside Police, North West Ambulance Service, and Wirral Council added: “Organisations across Cheshire and Merseyside are working closely with colleagues from the UK Health Security Agency and other government bodies to support the repatriation of passengers from MV Hondius.

“In line with advice from the UK Health Security Agency, on arrival they will be taken to a managed setting for clinical assessment and testing. We expect this initial stay to be up to 72 hours.

“Following this, public health specialists will assess whether they can isolate at home or at another suitable location, based on their living arrangements. The risk to the general population remains very low.

“Our partner organisations are working together to ensure that all returning passengers are welcomed, comfortable and well supported throughout their stay.

“We would like to thank our staff and partners across the NHS, emergency services and local government for their professionalism and dedication in coordinating this response, and we will continue to work closely with the UK Health Security Agency and other partners throughout.”

British passengers to be taken to hospital in Merseyside, reports claim

16:17 , Amy-Clare Martin

British passengers on the cruise ship at the centre of the hantavirus outbreak will be taken to isolate at a hospital in Merseyside, Sky News reports.

They will reportedly be transferred to Arrowe Park on the Wirral after they are repatriated.

The site was previously used for people returning from China at the start of the COVID pandemic in 2020, after being flown back to the UK.

There are currently 22 British citizens - 19 passengers and three crew members - still aboard the vessel, which is expected to dock at Tenerife in the Canary Islands early tomorrow morning.

None of the passengers on the ship are showing symptoms of the virus, the chief of the World Health Organisation said earlier.

Arrowe Park Hospital was where British nationals who were repatriated after a prolonged stay on a Covid-hit cruise ship in 2020 (AFP/Getty)

Aboard the hantavirus-hit cruise ship, some passengers fear what awaits back home

16:00 , Harriette Boucher

In the days since the hantavirus outbreak aboard a cruise ship in the Atlantic Ocean, concern has taken hold among at least some of its Spanish passengers — but not so much because they fear contracting the illness. Rather, they are afraid of how they will be received back on land.

They have seen sensational news reports and devil-may-care memes ostracising the MV Hondius and those aboard, two passengers told The Associated Press by phone from the ship on Friday.

“You go onto social media – they want to dynamite the boat. They want to sink the boat,” a Spanish man on the ship told The Associated Press by phone.

He says he worries about being stigmatised as a viral vector to be avoided — or worse. He spoke on condition of anonymity because of these concerns, and another Spanish woman insisted on anonymity for the same reason.

“You see what’s out there and you realise you’re heading into the eye of a hurricane," she said. “Many people forget that in here there are more than 140 passengers. In reality, there are 140 human beings.”

Why are cruise ships prone to disease outbreaks? From hantavirus to COVID

15:30 , Harriette Boucher

Cruises are sold as floating holidays, but they are also useful for understanding public health. Cruise ships are carefully designed places where many people live, eat, relax and move through the same shared spaces for days at a time. They show how easily illness can spread when people are packed into a single interconnected environment.

Think of a cruise ship as a temporary city at sea. It has restaurants, theatres, lifts, cabins, kitchens, water systems and indoor gathering spaces. That is great for convenience, but it also means that once an infection gets on board, it can move through the ship in ways that are hard to stop.

The Diamond Princess outbreak is perhaps the best-known example. During the 2020 COVID outbreak, 619 passengers and crew tested positive for the disease. Researchers found that the ship conditions made the novel coronavirus spread more easily. Their modelling suggested that public health measures, such as isolation and quarantine, prevented many more cases, but it also showed that an earlier response would have further limited the outbreak.

Norovirus (the so-called vomiting bug) is the infection most closely linked to cruise ships. In a review of previously published studies, researchers found 127 reports of norovirus outbreaks on cruise ships, with many linked to contaminated food, contaminated surfaces and person-to-person spread. A more recent report from the US also showed that norovirus can spread very rapidly from person to person on a cruise ship.

This helps explain why ships such as Celebrity Mercury, Explorer of the Seas and Carnival Triumph have become familiar names in outbreak reports. These were not unusual in some special way; they were simply settings where shared dining, close contact and frequent movement through common areas allowed infection to spread fast.

Image from: Hantavirus latest: Cruise ship to dock in Tenerife early Sunday as UK sends plane to evacuate passengers

Why are cruise ships prone to disease outbreaks? From hantavirus to COVID

How many Britons have been infected with hantavirus?

15:00 , Harriette Boucher

British health authorities confirmed on Friday that a third British national aboard the MV Hondius was suspected of being infected with hantavirus.

The UK Health Security Agency said the person is on the island of Tristan da Cunha, a remote British overseas territory in the south Atlantic where the ship stopped in April.

Another two British men, one who was a doctor on the ship, are receiving treatment in the Netherlands and South Africa.

Martin Anstee, a 56 year old expedition guide, was one of the hantavirus patients evacuated from the boat on Wednesday.

The ship’s 41 year old British doctor was also removed.

Hantavirus is giving me Covid flashbacks – so how worried should I be?

14:30 , Harriette Boucher

The sight of people in hazmat suits alongside phrases like ‘self-isolation’ dominating the airwaves is bringing back troubling memories for Katie Rosseinsky, who considers whether we should all start stocking up on toilet roll:

Image from: Hantavirus latest: Cruise ship to dock in Tenerife early Sunday as UK sends plane to evacuate passengers

Hantavirus is giving me Covid flashbacks – so how worried should I be?

Health experts write guidance to contain first ship-borne hantavirus outbreak

14:00 , Harriette Boucher

As the cruise ship hit by a hantavirus outbreak sails towards Tenerife, World Health Organization officials are racing to draw up step-by-step guidance for what should happen next for the nearly 150 passengers ⁠when they finally reach land on Sunday.

Because this is the first ever hantavirus outbreak recorded on a cruise ship, official say new protocols are needed.

WHO officials and hantavirus experts said the outbreak could be managed by adapting standard public health steps, like isolating sick passengers or those ⁠who may have been in contact with them.

None of the ​passengers ⁠on the ship now have symptoms, the ship's operator has said.

Officials are also seeking tips from Argentina, where a previous outbreak of the Andes virus, the same strain as on ⁠the ship, was snuffed out in 2019.

“If we follow public health measures and the lessons we learned from Argentina we can break this chain of transmission. This doesn't need to be a large epidemic,” Abdi Rahman Mahamud, director of the WHO's alert and response coordination department, said.

WHO warn six week incubation period could mean further hantavirus cases reported

13:30 , Harriette Boucher

What are the symptoms of hantavirus and how is it treated?

13:00 , Harriette Boucher

What are the symptoms?

  • Fever
  • Extreme fatigue
  • Muscle aches
  • Stomach pain
  • Nausea
  • Vomiting
  • Diarrhoea
  • Shortness of breath
  • Symptoms usually appear between 2 to 4 weeks after being exposed to the virus, but there are reports of symptoms occurring up to 40 days after exposure.

How is the virus treated?

There is currently no vaccine or specific antiviral treatment for hantavirus infections.

Treatment is supportive and based on symptoms, such as hospital care and respiratory support for breathing difficulties.

WHO chief arrives in Spain to coordinate evacuation

12:33 , Harriette Boucher

Singapore says two cruise ship passengers test negative for hantavirus

12:30 , Harriette Boucher

The Independent’s Alisha Rahaman Sarkar writes:

Two Singaporeans who were on board the MV Hondius cruise ship struck by a hantavirus outbreak have tested negative for the virus, the island nation’s Communicable Diseases Agency (CDA) has confirmed.

The CDA's public health laboratory conducted testing on multiple samples collected from the individuals ​and confirmed that hantavirus, including the Andes virus, was not detected, ​it said.

The Singaporeans on board the MV Hondius – two men aged 67 and 65 – were isolated at the National Centre for Infectious Diseases. ​They were on board the cruise ship when it departed from the Argentinian port of Ushuaia ‌on ⁠1 April, the CDA said in a statement.

The duo will be quarantined for 30 days from the date of last exposure as an added precaution and will undergo further testing before being released. They will then be ​monitored through phone ​surveillance for the ⁠remainder of 45 days, the maximum incubation period for hantavirus exposure.

"The risk to the general public in Singapore ​remains low," the agency said, adding it was closely ​monitoring the ⁠situation.

Image from: Hantavirus latest: Cruise ship to dock in Tenerife early Sunday as UK sends plane to evacuate passengers

Singapore says two cruise ship passengers test negative for hantavirus

WHO chief arrives in Spain ahead of passenger disembarkation from Hantavirus cruise ship

12:13 , Harriette Boucher

The head of the World ⁠Health Organisation has touched down in Spain today, where he will join senior ⁠government ​officials in ⁠Tenerife to oversee the ⁠evacuation of passengers ​on the hantavirus-hit cruise ship.

Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebrey said he was in contact with the ship's captain and a WHO colleague that is on board the boat.

There are no additional people on ⁠board showing symptoms of ‌Hantavirus, he said.

What has Trump said about the hantavirus outbreak?

12:00 , Harriette Boucher

Donald Trump said yesterday that hantavirus was “under very good control” in the US.

”We have it,” he told reporters. “We have very good people looking at it. It seems to be okay. They know the virus very well, they’ve worked with it for a long time.

“[It’s] not easy to pass on. We hope that’s true.”

He added it was “not easily transferable, unlike Covid.”

Asked if the US would consider leaving the World Health Organisation over the outbreak, he said: “No, we seem to have things under very good control.”

In an update on Friday, the US centre for disease control (CDC), said: “To date, no cases of Andes virus have been reported in the United States as a result of this outbreak.

“At this time, the overall risk to travellers and the American public remains extremely low. Routine travel can continue as normal.

“CDC is working with the US state department and other US government partners to get Americans on the ship home as quickly and as safely as possible.”

European countries sending planes to collect citizens from hantavirus ship

11:57 , Harriette Boucher

Several European governments will be sending planes to Tenerife on Sunday to evacuate nationals on the hantavirus-hit cruise ship

Spain's interior minister has confirmed that Germany, France, Belgium, Ireland, and the Netherlands are among the countries sending aircraft.

The US and UK have also confirmed planes and contingency plans were ‌being arranged ​for non-EU ‌citizens whose ⁠countries were unable to ⁠send air transport, Fernando Grande-Marlaska said.

He added that the European ‌Union is sending ‌two further planes for the remaining ⁠European citizens.

WHO reacts to fears of a COVID-style hantavirus pandemic

11:30 , Harriette Boucher

What happens when the MV Hondius arrives in Tenerife?

11:00 , Harriette Boucher

The hantavirus-stricken cruise ship is due to dock in Tenerife on Sunday, and with it, the 140 passengers who have been stuck on the boat for weeks.

Health officials have said they will perform careful evacuations, and passengers will be taken to a “completely isolated, cordoned-off area.”

Both the UK and the US are sending planes to evacuate their citizens from the ship.

Once the vessel reaches Tenerife, passengers will be evacuated in small boats to buses only after their repatriation flights are ready to take them, Spanish officials said Friday.

Passengers will be transported in isolated and guarded vehicles, and the parts of the airport they travel through will be cordoned off.

Their impending arrival has been met with protest on the island, as residents fear for their safety.

But officials have sought to reassure the public in the Canary Islands about possible exposure to the virus among the general population.

Christian Lindmeier, a WHO spokesman, said: “The risk remains absolutely low,” adding: “This is not a new Covid.”

Watch: Trump says hantavirus situation ‘under very good control’

16:43 , Amy-Clare Martin

In pictures: Protestors in Tenerife take to the streets to oppose the arrival of the Hantavirus ship

10:30 , Harriette Boucher

Dockers hold banners reading 'Without protocol, no safety' as they protest against the arrival of a cruise ship affected by hantavirus (AFP/Getty) (Reuters) (AFP/Getty)

WHO says risk of contagion from cruise ship 'absolutely low'

10:00 , Adam Withnall

The World Health Organisation considers the risk to the wider public from the outbreak as low.

On Friday, the WHO said a flight attendant on a plane briefly boarded by an infected cruise passenger has tested negative for hantavirus. Her possible infection had raised concerns about the virus’ potential transmissibility.

The flight attendant’s negative result should ease concerns among the public, said Christian Lindmeier, a WHO spokesman. “The risk remains absolutely low,” he said. “This is not a new Covid.”

Hantavirus is usually spread by the inhalation of contaminated rodent droppings and isn’t easily transmitted between people. But the Andes virus detected in the cruise ship outbreak may be able to spread between people in rare cases. Symptoms usually show between one and eight weeks after exposure.

Health authorities across four continents were tracking down and monitoring more than two dozen passengers who disembarked the ship before the deadly outbreak was detected. They were also scrambling to trace others who may have come into contact with them.

Passengers fear being ostracised after disembarking

09:15 , Adam Withnall

In interviews with The Associated Press, two Spanish passengers — speaking on condition of anonymity because of fears they’ll be ostracised once on land — said that despite the outbreak, their days aboard have passed with relative tranquility.

Some people are bird-watching, and others are gathering in common areas to read or attend talks, while wearing masks and social distancing. Both passengers told AP they’re worried about how they’ll be treated in Spain and once home.

“We’re scared by all the news that’s coming out, by how people are going to receive us, by how people see us,” one said. “We’re just normal people. We’ve heard that this is a millionaires’ cruise, and it’s the complete opposite of reality. And we’re scared by this.”

Spanish authorities prepare to receive virus-stricken ship

08:24 , Adam Withnall

Spanish authorities on Friday were preparing to receive more than 140 passengers and crew members on board a hantavirus-stricken cruise ship headed for the Canary Islands, where health officials have said they will perform careful evacuations.

The vessel is expected to arrive Sunday at the Spanish island of Tenerife, off the coast of West Africa, and passengers will be taken to a “completely isolated, cordoned-off area,” said the head of Spain's emergency services, Virginia Barcones.

Both the US and the UK have agreed to send planes to evacuate their citizens from the cruise ship.

What to know about hantavirus as illness linked with three deaths on Atlantic cruise ship

07:00 , Harriette Boucher

Image from: Hantavirus latest: Cruise ship to dock in Tenerife early Sunday as UK sends plane to evacuate passengers

What to know about hantavirus as illness linked with three deaths on cruise ship

WHO reacts to fears of a COVID-style hantavirus pandemic

06:00 , Harriette Boucher

Measures to contain spread of hantavirus could be take from 'measles or Elbola', expert says

05:00 , Maryam Zakir-Hussain

Krutika Kuppalli, associate professor of medicine at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in the US, who formerly worked on mpox protocols at the World Health Organization, said measures to contain the spread of hantavirus could be taken from previous outbreaks.

“It’s the same ​principle as for measles, or Ebola. Contact tracing doesn’t change,” she said.

Soldiers deployed to help island of St Helena

04:00 , Maryam Zakir-Hussain

Our health editor Rebecca Thomas reports:

British military personnel and equipment have been deployed to the islands.

As officials trace contacts from the MV Hondius and those who disembarked the ship, it is understood that British military personnel have been deployed to the islands with equipment to provide support to those on the ground.

Officials are ensuring that members of the population on the islands who did come into contact with passengers are appropriately graded to understand their level of risk with passengers.

It is understood that the virus spreads through close contact.

Rats don’t deserve to be public enemy No 1 – they can be as playful as puppies

03:00 , Maryam Zakir-Hussain

Thanks to a hantavirus-stricken cruise ship, rodents are getting a bad rap – and that’s nothing new, says Joe Shute, who is a staunch admirer of these furry pariahs:

Image from: Hantavirus latest: Cruise ship to dock in Tenerife early Sunday as UK sends plane to evacuate passengers

Rats don’t deserve to be public enemy number one – they can be as playful as puppies

A timeline of the cruise ship hantavirus outbreak and when passengers fell sick

02:00 , Maryam Zakir-Hussain

An outbreak of the rare hantavirus unfolded over weeks on a cruise ship as it sailed across the Atlantic Ocean.

At least three passengers have died and several others are sick and were evacuated from the ship. Health authorities are trying to trace passengers who left the ship previously and people who might have had contact with them.

More than 140 passengers and crew members are still aboard the Dutch-flagged MV Hondius as it heads for Spain's Canary Islands.

Hantavirus is a rodent-borne infection that in rare cases can be transmitted from person to person, though the World Health Organization says the risk to the wider public is low because the virus can’t easily be passed between people.

Image from: Hantavirus latest: Cruise ship to dock in Tenerife early Sunday as UK sends plane to evacuate passengers

A timeline of the cruise ship hantavirus outbreak and when passengers fell sick

Two New Jersey residents were potentially exposed to a person infected with Hantavirus

01:00 , Maryam Zakir-Hussain

The New Jersey Department of Health been notified by the CDC that two New Jersey residents were potentially exposed to a person infected with hantavirus after that individual departed from the cruise ship MV Hondius.

What we don't know about the hantavirus outbreak as the cruise ship nears Spanish territory

Saturday 9 May 2026 00:00 , Maryam Zakir-Hussain

Countries around the world are preparing to deal with the 140 passengers and crew members on board a hantavirus-stricken cruise ship headed for the Canary Islands.

The vessel is expected to reach the Spanish island of Tenerife, off the coast of West Africa, early Sunday morning.

At least three passengers have died, and several other people have been infected.

Hantavirus is usually spread by the inhalation of contaminated rodent droppings. Symptoms usually show between one and eight weeks after exposure. The World Health Organization says the risk to the wider public from the outbreak is low, but the Andes virus implicated in the cruise ship outbreak may be able to spread between people in rare cases.

Image from: Hantavirus latest: Cruise ship to dock in Tenerife early Sunday as UK sends plane to evacuate passengers

What we don't know about the hantavirus outbreak as the cruise ship nears Spanish territory

Hantavirus outbreak: Government hopes to fly 22 Britons back to UK on Sunday

Friday 8 May 2026 23:00 , Maryam Zakir-Hussain

Some 22 British passengers and crew on board a cruise ship hit by an outbreak of hantavirus are expected to reach Tenerife on Sunday, with the hope of flying them back to the UK the same day.

Officials from the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) and Foreign Office will greet the MV Hondius ship when it docks in the Canary Islands, with Britons on board tested for hantavirus before they disembark.

If people test negative and are not displaying symptoms, they will be taken straight to a dedicated repatriation flight, with the hope they will be flown back to the UK the same day.

That flight will be staffed by medical professionals and will carry equipment and medicines in case people fall ill.The ship is currently on track to dock in Tenerife on Sunday, depending on weather conditions as it sails on a route from the coast off Cape Verde.

The majority of Britons returning are expected to self-isolate at home but the UKHSA is making arrangements for people to stay at other facilities if that is not possible.

It said those details will be released at a further date.

The hantavirus cruise ship and the contamination risk a tourism surge puts on Antarctica

Friday 8 May 2026 22:00 , Rebecca Whittaker

Antarctica's pristine, frozen landscapes are experiencing a surge in tourism, fuelled by growing fears that climate change is causing irreversible melting. However, experts are now warning that this influx of visitors brings an increased risk of contamination, illness, and other potential damage to the continent's delicate ecosystem.

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Image from: Hantavirus latest: Cruise ship to dock in Tenerife early Sunday as UK sends plane to evacuate passengers

The hantavirus cruise ship and the risk a tourism surge puts on Antarctica

What are the symptoms of hantavirus and how is it treated?

Friday 8 May 2026 21:30 , Rebecca Whittaker

What are the symptoms?

  • Fever
  • Extreme fatigue
  • Muscle aches
  • Stomach pain
  • Nausea
  • Vomiting
  • Diarrhoea
  • Shortness of breath
  • Symptoms usually appear between 2 to 4 weeks after being exposed to the virus, but there are reports of symptoms occurring up to 40 days after exposure.

How is the virus treated?

There is currently no vaccine or specific antiviral treatment for hantavirus infections.

Treatment is supportive and based on symptoms, such as hospital care and respiratory support for breathing difficulties.

Third British national has suspected hantavirus linked to cruise ship

Friday 8 May 2026 21:00 , Rebecca Whittaker

Image from: Hantavirus latest: Cruise ship to dock in Tenerife early Sunday as UK sends plane to evacuate passengers

Third British national has suspected hantavirus linked to cruise ship

Health experts write guidance to contain first ship-borne hantavirus outbreak

Friday 8 May 2026 20:30 , Rebecca Whittaker

As the cruise ship hit by a hantavirus outbreak sails towards Tenerife, World Health Organization officials are racing to draw up step-by-step guidance for what should happen next for the nearly 150 passengers ⁠when they finally reach land on Sunday.

Because this is the first ever hantavirus outbreak recorded on a cruise ship, official say new protocols are needed.

WHO officials and hantavirus experts said the outbreak could be managed by adapting standard public health steps, like isolating sick passengers or those ⁠who may have been in contact with them.

None of the ​passengers ⁠on the ship now have symptoms, the ship's operator has said.

Officials are also seeking tips from Argentina, where a previous outbreak of the Andes virus, the same strain as on ⁠the ship, was snuffed out in 2019.

“If we follow public health measures and the lessons we learned from Argentina we can break this chain of transmission. This doesn't need to be a large epidemic,” Abdi Rahman Mahamud, director of the WHO's alert and response coordination department, said.

Hantavirus is giving me Covid flashbacks – so how worried should I be?

Friday 8 May 2026 20:00 , Rebecca Whittaker

The sight of people in hazmat suits alongside phrases like ‘self-isolation’ dominating the airwaves is bringing back troubling memories for Katie Rosseinsky, who considers whether we should all start stocking up on toilet roll.

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Image from: Hantavirus latest: Cruise ship to dock in Tenerife early Sunday as UK sends plane to evacuate passengers

Hantavirus is giving me Covid flashbacks – so how worried should I be?