The MV Hondius departed Tenerife for the Netherlands on Monday after its final six passengers,four Australians, one Briton, and one New Zealander—and some crew members disembarked. Three passengers have died after travelling on the ship, two of whom were confirmed to have had the virus.

New Positive Cases Confirmed

An American and a French national who had previously returned home have tested positive, authorities said. Seven cases of hantavirus linked to the MV Hondius have been confirmed, with two others suspected, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Spain’s health ministry said one Spaniard who is quarantining in Madrid after being evacuated from the vessel had also provisionally tested positive for hantavirus on Monday.

Repatriation and Quarantine Measures

On Monday, the US health department said a second American national on Sunday’s repatriation flight had also shown mild symptoms, adding that both passengers had travelled back in ‘biocontainment units out of an abundance of caution.’ French Health Minister Stéphanie Rist said a woman was isolating in Paris and that her health was deteriorating, with 22 contacts traced.

Two British nationals with confirmed cases are currently being treated in the Netherlands and South Africa. Symptoms can include fever, extreme fatigue, muscle aches, stomach pain, vomiting, diarrhoea, and shortness of breath. Officials say the risk of a major outbreak is very low.

Remaining Crew and Passengers

As of Monday evening, the ship’s operator Oceanwide Expeditions said 27 people remain on board the ship, including 25 crew members and two medical staff. These include 17 people from the Philippines, four from the Netherlands (including the two medical staff), four from Ukraine, one from Russia, and one from Poland. Ukraine’s foreign ministry said the Ukrainians on board would help with the ship’s transfer to the Netherlands and would quarantine at a medical facility on arrival. It added that they had shown no signs of illness.

More than 90 passengers of the MV Hondius, which was docked in Spain’s Canary Islands, have been repatriated over the past few days. Four Canadian passengers landed in Victoria, British Columbia, on Sunday after taking a chartered flight from Tenerife to Quebec. Authorities said they would self-isolate and be monitored for at least three weeks. The US Department of Health and Human Services said all 17 US citizens on Sunday’s flight would undergo ‘clinical assessment’ at a medical facility in Nebraska. A British national living in the US was also repatriated alongside them.

Seven other US passengers had already returned home and are being monitored in their home states. Before the American case was confirmed, WHO head Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned that the decision by the US not to follow the organisation’s guidelines over the hantavirus outbreak ‘may have risks.’ The WHO has recommended 42 days of isolation for those leaving the MV Hondius.

Dr Jay Bhattacharya, acting head of the US Centers for Disease Control (CDC), said he did not want to cause public panic, insisting that human-to-human transmission was rare and it should not be treated like Covid. Cruise ship passengers were pictured wearing blue gowns, bouffant caps, and medical face masks as they disembarked in Tenerife.

Fourteen Spaniards flown to Madrid are in mandatory quarantine at a military hospital, while another two evacuation flights were scheduled for Monday. A separate flight carrying 26 passengers and crew—including eight Dutch nationals,arrived in the Netherlands on Sunday. In a video message released on Monday by Oceanwide Expeditions, which operates the MV Hondius, the captain said the crew’s thoughts were ‘with the ones that are no longer with us.’ Jan Dobrogowski added that ‘the past few weeks have been extremely challenging to us all,’ while praising the patience, discipline, and kindness shown on board the vessel.

The Spanish health minister said that a police officer involved in the repatriation operation had died of cardiac arrest. An elderly Dutch man was the first passenger who died on board the MV Hondius on 11 April. He had earlier developed symptoms and is believed to have been the first infected in the outbreak, but died before he could be tested. His wife left the ship on 24 April on the island of St Helena and flew to South Africa. She died two days later in a clinic in Johannesburg. A German woman died on board the cruise ship on 2 May. Both women are confirmed cases.

The MV Hondius had been carrying 147 passengers and crew from 23 countries after departing from Ushuaia in Argentina on 1 April. Two people in a serious condition who were evacuated from a cruise ship with a confirmed outbreak of deadly hantavirus have arrived in the Netherlands for treatment, operator Oceanwide Expeditions has said. A third passenger in a stable condition was on board an evacuation flight that has been delayed, the operator added. The MV Hondius is now sailing towards Spain’s Canary Islands after being anchored for three days near Cape Verde, an archipelago nation off the West African coast.

Oceanwide Expeditions said the 65-year-old German evacuee was ‘closely associated’ with a German woman who died on board the ship on 2 May. The three evacuees were British, Dutch, and German. The British evacuee has been identified by several media outlets as 56-year-old ex-police officer Martin Anstee, who is understood to be in a ‘stable condition’ in the Netherlands. A 41-year-old Dutch crew member is also among those who have been evacuated. Separately, Dutch media reported on Thursday that a KLM flight attendant had been admitted to hospital in Amsterdam with hantavirus symptoms. The stewardess reportedly came into contact with a 69-year-old Dutch woman after she was briefly on board a KLM plane in South Africa but was deemed too ill to fly. The 69-year-old later died, and her death is being investigated as a suspected hantavirus case by South African health authorities.

Three people who were aboard the ship have died since it set sail from Argentina a month ago. Meanwhile, two US states have confirmed to the BBC that they are monitoring three passengers who had returned to the US after disembarking earlier. All are currently not displaying symptoms. Georgia’s public health department said two residents were being monitored and were in good health, showing no signs of infection. Arizona’s health department said one resident was being monitored, but was not symptomatic.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has also confirmed a man who had travelled back to Switzerland after disembarking the ship tested positive for hantavirus and is receiving care at a hospital in Zurich. ‘The patient had responded to an email from the ship’s operator informing the passengers of the health event,’ World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a statement. A total of 146 people from 23 different countries remain aboard the MV Hondius under ‘strict precautionary measures,’ Oceanwide Expeditions said.

In its latest update, the World Health Organization (WHO) said eight cases of hantavirus—three confirmed and five suspected,have so far been identified in people who were on the ship. South African health authorities have said the Andes strain of hantavirus—prominent in Latin America, where the cruise originated,was found in two of the confirmed patients after tests were carried out by the country’s National Institute for Communicable Diseases.