Passengers aboard the cruise ship MV Hondius disembark in Tenerife as authorities manage a hantavirus outbreak, preparing them for repatriation flights.
Inspections and Testing Underway
Health officials from Spain board the vessel upon its arrival in the Canary Islands. UK authorities coordinate with the 22 British nationals on board during disembarkation. Every passenger receives testing prior to boarding chartered flights back to the United Kingdom.
Case Details and Global Impact
The outbreak links to six confirmed hantavirus cases from the cruise, with four individuals currently hospitalized. The World Health Organization reports a total of eight cases worldwide, including three fatalities. Officials reclassify one prior suspected case as negative after testing.
No symptomatic passengers remain on the ship, according to health assessments.
British Nationals Affected
The UK Health Security Agency identifies three British nationals among the eight cases: two confirmed infections requiring hospital care in South Africa and the Netherlands, and one suspected case on Tristan da Cunha. Local health services support the individual on the remote South Atlantic island.
Emergency Aid to Tristan da Cunha
A specialist Army team, including medical personnel, parachutes onto Tristan da Cunha with essential supplies and equipment. Six paratroopers, an RAF consultant, and an Army nurse from 16 Air Assault Brigade arrive on Saturday evening. Oxygen and medical aid drop to the boat-accessible British overseas territory.
The Ministry of Defence notes this marks the first parachute deployment of medical personnel for humanitarian aid there. An RAF A400M Atlas flies from RAF Brize Norton to Ascension Island, supported by an RAF Voyager, before reaching the island.
Repatriation and Isolation Plans
Returning passengers transfer to an isolation facility at Arrowe Park Hospital in Wirral, Merseyside, via chartered flight. The site separates from public areas for clinical assessments and precautionary testing. The hospital previously housed British citizens repatriated from Wuhan, China, in early 2020.
Yvette Cooper, the foreign secretary, emphasizes safety as the top priority for all British citizens. “We will continue to work closely with international authorities and the Tristan da Cunha administration, keeping those affected informed and ensuring the right support is in place in the UK and across the Overseas Territories,” she states.




