A cruise ship linked to a hantavirus outbreak has docked in Tenerife, Spain, where its 147 passengers are set to disembark during a meticulously planned repatriation process involving multiple countries.
As the MV Hondius arrived at the Port of Granadilla at dawn, small boats with flashing lights approached the vessel.
Shadows were visible through the curtained windows of the ship as a tugboat neared it, and a masked figure was seen at the entrance. Meanwhile, hazmat-suited personnel and officials wearing “World Health Organization” gear waited at the dock.
Local health authorities, led by Spain’s health minister Mónica García, stated that medical teams would board the ship to conduct health checks on its passengers and crew. Following these evaluations, passengers will be returned to their home nations.
The ship, which departed Argentina last month, has been associated with three confirmed hantavirus-related deaths, a rare disease usually contracted through contact with infected rodents’ excrement. Other passengers have been evacuated for medical attention.
Officials indicated that the ship would anchor at a safe distance from the dock. Passengers will be brought ashore in small boats, each with a maximum capacity of ten people, as per guidelines from Oceanwide Expeditions.
Various countries, including the US, Germany, France, Belgium, Ireland, and the Netherlands, are deploying aircraft to facilitate the evacuation of their citizens from the ship. According to Oceanwide, the order of disembarkation will be arranged in line with the arrivals of repatriation flights, with luggage remaining on the ship for later retrieval.
A representative from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention noted that the 17 American passengers, who are currently asymptomatic, will be taken to the University of Nebraska Medical Center, which houses the National Quarantine Unit.

