World

Hantavirus-stricken cruise ship heads to Spain after three people evacuated

A boat sails next to the anchored cruise ship MV Hondius as sick passengers are evacuated by boat from the cruise ship, off the port city Praia, Cape Verde, in this screengrab obtained from a video on Tuesday.
A boat sails next to the anchored cruise ship MV Hondius as sick passengers are evacuated by boat from the cruise ship, off the port city Praia, Cape Verde, in this screengrab obtained from a video on Tuesday. Reuters TV

GENEVA/MADRID - A luxury cruise ship hit by a deadly hantavirus outbreak and marooned since Sunday off the coast of Cape Verde left for Spain on Wednesday, a Reuters witness said, after three people, two of them seriously ill, were evacuated.

The MV Hondius, with nearly 150 people on board, is expected to dock in Spain’s Tenerife, in the Canary Islands, within three days, Spain’s Health Minister Monica Garcia said, adding that those still on board were not presenting any symptoms of the disease.

Once in Tenerife, if they are still healthy, all non-Spanish citizens will be repatriated to their countries, Garcia told a press conference in Madrid.

The 14 Spanish passengers will be quarantined in a military hospital in Madrid, she said. The duration of the quarantine will depend on when they potentially had contact with the virus, she said, adding that it has a 45-day incubation period.

Three people - a Dutch couple and a German national - have died in the outbreak.

A total of eight people - including a Swiss citizen who has returned home and is being treated in Zurich - are suspected to have contracted the virus, with three of them confirmed by laboratory testing, the World Health Organization said.

Argentina’s health ministry will carry out rodent trapping and analysis in the southern city of Ushuaia, the origin point of the cruise ship hit by the outbreak, it said in a statement.

Officials are reconstructing the itinerary of the Dutch citizens who traveled in Argentina and Chile and later presented symptoms of hantavirus on the cruise, the statement said.

No associated cases have been found in Argentina.

Evacuations

South Africa confirmed it had identified among the victims the Andean strain of the virus that can - in rare cases - spread among humans through very close contact. Argentina’s health ministry said it would send Andes virus RNA and guidelines for diagnosis and treatment to laboratories in Spain, Senegal, South Africa, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom.

“This is the only (hantavirus) strain that is known to cause human-to-human transmission, but such transmission is very rare and ... only happens due to very close contact,” South Africa’s health ministry said.

Nevertheless, some Tenerife residents said they were worried about the ship docking there. “People are scared,” said Margarita Maria, 62, adding that the boat should go elsewhere in Spain.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a post on X that the three people evacuated from the ship on Wednesday were on their way to the Netherlands.

The Dutch Foreign Ministry said these people included a Dutch person, a German and a Briton, and that they would be transported to specialised hospitals in Europe.

One of the aircraft transporting two patients from Cape Verde to Amsterdam was due to stop in Morocco to refuel, but Morocco refused to allow the aircraft to land, and the plane was instead refuelling at the airport in Gran Canaria, Spain’s health ministry said.

While in Gran Canaria, the on-board doctor reported a problem with the patient’s life support system, and the patient is now connected to the airport’s electrical supply, awaiting the arrival of a new aircraft to continue the journey, the ministry said.

Two of those evacuated presented acute symptoms, the ship’s operator, Oceanwide Expeditions, said. The third person was closely linked to the German passenger who died on the ship on May 2. The Dutch ministry said that the person was possibly infected with the virus.

The ship set off from the southern tip of Argentina on April 1 and travelled to some of the most remote places on earth, including the British island of Saint Helena.

The Dutch government said in a letter to parliament that around 40 people disembarked at Saint Helena, including the Swiss national who has since developed symptoms.

Cape Verde had been intended as the ship’s final destination, but the archipelago nation off West Africa had not allowed the passengers to come ashore because of the outbreak.

‘Very, very different to COVID’

Since the start of the outbreak, the WHO has said the risk to the wider public from a virus usually transmitted by rodents is low and it stressed on Wednesday that this remained the case.

“So when we say close contact (for human-to-human transmission), we mean very close physical contact, whether it’s sharing a bunk room or sharing a cabin, providing medical care, for example, (that is) very, very different to COVID and very different to influenza,” Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO director of epidemic and pandemic management, told Reuters.

Van Kerkhove said the WHO was working with countries to follow up with passengers who left the boat at Saint Helena in the south Atlantic, before it reached Cape Verde.

South Africa has identified 65 people who have been in contact with people with confirmed or suspected hantavirus cases, and other countries have identified 12, the WHO’s South Africa representative, Shenaaz El-Halabi, told Reuters.

‘Our days have been close to normal’

Passenger Kasem Hato told Reuters the ship’s captain was keeping passengers updated and that those on board had been advised to limit close contact with other passengers and use hand sanitizer regularly.

“People are taking the situation seriously but without any panic, trying to keep social distancing and wearing masks to be safe,” he said.

“Our days have been close to normal, just waiting for authorities to find a solution, but morale on the ship is high and we’re keeping ourselves busy with reading, watching movies, having hot drinks, and that kind of things.” 

US response

The United States is closely monitoring the situation with American travelers on board the ship, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said on Wednesday.

“The Department of State is leading a coordinated, whole-of-government response including direct contact with passengers, diplomatic coordination, and engagement with domestic and international health authorities,” the CDC said in a statement.

The risk to the American public is extremely low at this time, the CDC added. 

People in at least three U.S. states were being monitored for potential hantavirus infections after the outbreak on the MV Hondius, though none had shown signs of illness, the New York Times reported earlier on Wednesday. 

Georgia is monitoring two residents, while California is monitoring an undisclosed number of residents who had also been on the ship, the newspaper said.

In an emailed statement to Reuters, the Georgia Department of Public Health said it was monitoring two residents who had returned home after disembarking from the cruise ship. Both individuals were currently in good health, showed no signs of infection, and were following current recommendations from the CDC, it added.

The Arizona Department of Health Services said in a separate emailed statement it was monitoring one resident who was a passenger on the ship and that the individual was not symptomatic.

The California Department of Public Health did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Additional reporting by Chandni Shah, Ananya Palyekar, Mrinmay Dey and Rhea Rose Abraham.

Copyright Reuters or USA Today Network via Reuters Connect.

This story was originally published May 6, 2026 at 6:58 PM.

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