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  • ✇Malay Mail - All
  • US citizen, French woman test positive after evacuation from hantavirus outbreak cruise ship
    MADRID, May 11 — An American citizen and a French woman evacuated from the cruise ship hit by a deadly hantavirus outbreak have tested positive, officials said, as the repatriation operation continued today. Following the positive test results, Spain defended the rigour of its sanitary measures during the complex evacuation yesterday of 94 people of 19 different nationalities from the MV Hondius, which is moored in the Canary Islands.The Dutch-flagged vessel has
     

US citizen, French woman test positive after evacuation from hantavirus outbreak cruise ship

11 May 2026 at 10:59

Malay Mail

MADRID, May 11 — An American citizen and a French woman evacuated from the cruise ship hit by a deadly hantavirus outbreak have tested positive, officials said, as the repatriation operation continued today. 

Following the positive test results, Spain defended the rigour of its sanitary measures during the complex evacuation yesterday of 94 people of 19 different nationalities from the MV Hondius, which is moored in the Canary Islands.

The Dutch-flagged vessel has been at the centre of global concern after three passengers died following an outbreak of the rare virus, which usually spreads among rodents and for which no cure exists.

Health officials have insisted that the risk to global public health is rare and dismissed comparisons to the Covid-19 pandemic.

The French woman, one of five evacuees from France placed in isolation in Paris, started to feel unwell on Sunday night, and “tests came back positive”, Health Minister Stephanie Rist said today. 

The US health department said one American national evacuated from the ship had “mild symptoms” and that another had tested positive for the Andes virus, the only hantavirus strain that is transmissible between humans.

Spain’s health ministry said “all measures” had been taken to stop the virus spreading during the evacuations, in which medical teams escorted passengers from the ship to an airport on the island of Tenerife under close supervision and following health checks.

It said the French patient “started to feel unwell during the flight and not while she was on the ship”.

The US citizen who tested positive “did not show symptoms when they were in Cape Verde”, where the MV Hondius stopped before reaching the Canary Islands, the ministry said.

“However, the US authorities have decided to treat the case as positive. For that reason, they requested a separate evacuation, which was carried out in a separate boat.”

Final flights to leave 

In all, eight cases have been confirmed in the outbreak, and two more are listed as “probable”, according to the World Health Organization and national health authorities, with citizens of six countries affected.

Other suspected cases and potential close contacts with infected people are being investigated, with health authorities in several countries tracking passengers who had already disembarked from the ship, plus anyone who may have come into contact with them.

Rist said 22 more close contacts had been identified among French nationals, including eight people who had travelled on an April 25 flight between Saint Helena and Johannesburg, and 14 more on a flight between Johannesburg and Amsterdam.

A Dutch woman passenger of the MV Hondius who died of hantavirus was on the flight to Johannesburg and later briefly boarded a flight to Amsterdam but was removed before take-off.

Two more repatriation flights to Australia and the Netherlands are planned on Monday to complete the evacuation of most of the ship’s almost 150 passengers and crew.

After refuelling, the ship is scheduled to leave Tenerife for the Netherlands at 7 pm with a skeleton crew.

“There are still some citizens from the Netherlands and Australia, and hopefully we can even finish before the scheduled time,” Spanish minister Angel Victor Torres told public radio RNE.

The MV Hondius left Argentina, where hantavirus is endemic, on April 1 for a cruise across the Atlantic Ocean to Cape Verde.

The World Health Organization believes the first infection occurred before the start of the voyage, followed by transmission between humans on board the vessel.

But Argentine health officials have questioned whether the outbreak originated in Ushuaia, based on the virus’s weeks-long incubation period and other factors.— AFP

 

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  • One US evacuee tests mildly positive for hantavirus as another shows symptoms on flight home
    WASHINGTON, May 11 — The US Department of Health and Human Services said yesterday that one of the 17 Americans being repatriated from a hantavirus-struck luxury cruise ship has tested mildly positive for the Andes strain of the ‌virus while a second has mild symptoms. All the US citizens are being airlifted to the United States, and the two passengers with symptoms are travelling in the plane’s biocontainment units, HHS added. The second symptomatic passenger ha
     

One US evacuee tests mildly positive for hantavirus as another shows symptoms on flight home

11 May 2026 at 03:06

Malay Mail

WASHINGTON, May 11 — The US Department of Health and Human Services said yesterday that one of the 17 Americans being repatriated from a hantavirus-struck luxury cruise ship has tested mildly positive for the Andes strain of the ‌virus while a second has mild symptoms. All the US citizens are being airlifted to the United States, and the two passengers with symptoms are travelling in the plane’s biocontainment units, HHS added. The second symptomatic passenger has not yet been confirmed as having the virus.

Hantaviruses are a group of viruses that are usually spread by rodents but in rare cases can be transmitted person to person. Health authorities have said the risk of the virus spreading ‌is low.

Eight people no longer on the MV Hondius have ⁠fallen ill, according to a World ⁠Health Organisation update from Friday, with six of ⁠them confirmed to have ⁠contracted the virus. ⁠A Dutch couple and a German national have died.

The Andes strain of hantavirus, identified in the ship’s outbreak, can cause severe lung ⁠illness that can be fatal in up to 50 per cent of cases, according to the WHO.

The US State Department’s airlift will transport passengers to the ASPR Regional Emerging Special Pathogen Treatment Centre (RESPTC) at the University of Nebraska Medical Centre in Omaha, Nebraska, and the ⁠passenger with mild symptoms will be taken to a second RESPTC, the HHS said.

On arrival at the facilities, each individual ⁠will undergo clinical assessment and receive care based on their condition, HHS added.

Spain ⁠and ⁠France have evacuated their citizens from the MV Hondius, which is anchored near Tenerife, the largest of the Canary Islands, officials said. Australia, Canada, the Netherlands, ‌Turkey, the UK and Ireland are also flying home nationals who were on the ship. — Reuters

 

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