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Cruise passengers evacuated in batches due to Hantavirus epidemic will return home on special flights | International | Central News Agency CNA



2026/5/10 21:59 (updated at 5/10 22:32) Please agree to our privacy policy to enable the news listening function. (Central News Agency’s Comprehensive Foreign Report on Tenilife Island on the 10th) The cruise ship “Hondías” where the hantavirus outbreak occurred is anchoring off the coast of Tenilife Island in Spain’s Canary Islands. The Spanish authorities plan to arrange for the people on board to disembark in batches in small boats. They will be quarantined after returning to the country on a special flight. The Wall Street Journal reported that World Health Organization (WHO) Secretary-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said yesterday that no one on the Dutch cruise ship Hondias currently has symptoms. He personally went to the Canary Islands to supervise on-site evacuation operations. Hantavirus is often spread through infected rodents. The only hantavirus known to be transmitted from person to person is the Andes virus strain, and it has been detected in six confirmed patients on the ship, attracting international attention. The WHO stated that as of May 8, a total of 8 reported cases had been received, of which 3 died. Tedros said that passengers evacuated from the Hondias will disembark “at the industrial port of Granadilla, far away from residential areas, and then board sealed vehicles accompanied by guards and travel through fully blocked passages” to take them to the nearest airport to fly home. In a statement, Tedros assured the residents of Tenerife Island: “You and your families will not be exposed to them.” According to reports, multiple charter flights or flights have been arranged to assist in the evacuation of cruise passengers, with destinations including the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, Belgium, Ireland, the Netherlands and France. This group of passengers includes 17 Americans. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is expected to send personnel to the Canary Islands to meet them and assist in their transfer to a special isolation facility in Omaha, Nebraska. Spanish authorities said that when the “Hondías” was anchored off the coast of Tenilife Island, the health department had sent people on board to conduct health checks on all passengers and crew. After that, they will be taken ashore in a small boat in groups of 5. Passengers must wear masks and are not allowed to bring carry-on luggage. After disembarking, passengers will take a bus to the nearest Tenerife South Airport and take a special flight back home. According to reports, some crew members will remain on the ship and the Hondias will continue to sail to the Netherlands. The French Ministry of Health stated that it will assist the evacuation of five French passengers today. After returning to the country, they will be quarantined in the hospital for a full 72 hours. After completing the assessment, they will be arranged to return home, and then undergo 45 days of quarantine and appropriate monitoring. No confirmed cases have been found in France, but health authorities pointed out that on a flight between St. Helena and Johannesburg on April 25, eight French citizens had been in close contact with a confirmed person. One of them had mild symptoms, but the preliminary test result as of the 8th was negative. (Compiled by: Hong Qiyuan) 1150510 Support the Central News Agency’s choice to stand with the facts. Every donation you make is a small amount of sponsorship to protect the freedom of the press. Download the Central News Agency’s “First-hand News” APP to get the latest news in real time. The text, pictures and audio and video of this website may not be reproduced, publicly broadcast or publicly transmitted and used without authorization.



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WHO: Cooperate with the United States and Argentina to respond to the Hantavirus epidemic on cruise ships | International | Central News Agency CNA



Please agree to our privacy policy to enable news listening. (Central News Agency, Geneva, July 7, Comprehensive Foreign News Report) Although the United States and Argentina have announced their withdrawal from the World Health Organization (WHO), the WHO said today that it still maintains good cooperation with the United States and U.S. agencies in responding to the deadly hantavirus epidemic, and also thanked the Argentine government for its cooperation. Agence France-Presse reported that the hantavirus outbreak occurred on the cruise ship MV Hondius in the Atlantic Ocean. The outbreak was only confirmed last weekend. Many countries are currently working to monitor passengers who had left the cruise ship and returned home before then. It is reported that many passengers have returned to the United States, which has announced its withdrawal from the WHO under President Donald Trump. WHO Secretary-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said that the two sides continue to exchange technical information. He told reporters at the WHO headquarters in Geneva: “The current situation is actually the same as in the past, that is to say, we share information here and obtain information from the United States.” Argentina is one of the core countries of this crisis. The Hondias sailed from the country on April 1, and the first case of the epidemic is believed to be infected in Argentina, and Argentina has also announced its withdrawal from the WHO. Tedros said today that the WHO “is cooperating with the Argentine health authorities.” The “Andes strain” circulating there is the only hantavirus strain known to be transmitted from person to person, and it is also the culprit of this epidemic. “I would like to thank the Argentine government for its cooperation based on their experience and expertise with the Andes strain,” Tedros said. He added that the WHO had “arranged to ship 2,500 test kits from Argentina to laboratories in five countries.” According to Tedros told reporters in Geneva, a total of 5 confirmed and 3 suspected cases, including 3 deaths, have been reported so far. He also said that more cases may emerge, and the Leiden University Medical Center in the Netherlands announced later that another patient had tested positive. Abdi Rahman Mahamud, director of the WHO’s Emergency Alert and Response Unit, said: “We believe that if public health measures are implemented and countries work together, this will be a contained epidemic.” People believed to be infected with the virus are being treated or quarantined in the United Kingdom, Germany, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and South Africa. Maria Van Kerkhove, Director of Epidemic and Pandemic Management, WHO Kerkhove) also emphasized: “This is not the beginning of an epidemic, nor is it the beginning of a pandemic. This is not COVID.” (Compiled by: Yang Zhaoyan) 1150508 supports Central News Agency’s choice to stand with the facts. Every donation you make is a force to protect press freedom. Small-scale sponsorship downloads the Central News Agency’s “First-hand News” APP to get the latest news in real time. The text, pictures and audio and video of this website may not be reproduced, publicly broadcast or publicly transmitted and used without authorization.



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