A cruise ship grappling with a fatal hantavirus outbreak that has claimed three lives reached waters off Spain’s Canary Islands on Sunday, kicking off a tightly controlled evacuation operation for most of the nearly 150 people on board after weeks of sailing across the Atlantic.
The Dutch-flagged MV Hondius, operated by expedition cruise company Oceanwide Expeditions, was escorted into the port of Granadilla de Abona by a Spanish Civil Guard patrol vessel, AFP correspondents on site confirmed, with vessel tracking data from VesselFinder independently verifying its arrival.
Three passengers — a married Dutch couple and a German national — have already died from the rare viral infection, which is most commonly spread through rodent populations. Alarmingly, tests have confirmed the presence of Andes virus, the only strain of hantavirus capable of human-to-human transmission, among confirmed cases, prompting coordinated international public health monitoring.
Speaking ahead of the ship’s arrival, World Health Organization (WHO) Director of Epidemic and Pandemic Preparedness Maria Van Kerkhove classified every person on board the vessel as a “high-risk contact” for exposure. However, she and WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus — who traveled to Spain to oversee the evacuation response — repeatedly emphasized that the overall risk to the general public and residents of the Canary Islands remains very low.
In a public letter to the people of Tenerife, Tedros sought to quash comparisons to the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, writing, “This is not another Covid.” He added that he was confident Spanish authorities, who have been preparing for the operation for days, would carry it out successfully, noting “Spain is ready and prepared.”
On the ground Sunday morning, AFP reporters observed white medical screening tents erected along the quay, with local police securing a restricted perimeter around the evacuation zone. Despite the high-profile public health response, daily life across Tenerife remained largely uninterrupted: residents swam at nearby beaches, shoppers visited local markets, and patrons gathered at outdoor cafe terraces. Local lottery vendor David Parada noted that while there was quiet underlying worry, most residents did not appear overly alarmed by the ship’s arrival.
Regional authorities opted against allowing the vessel to dock permanently, a precautionary measure that means the MV Hondius will remain anchored offshore while the evacuation is carried out Sunday and Monday. Weather conditions only permit the operation during this narrow window, public health officials confirmed. Evacuation began around 7:00 GMT Sunday, with all passengers and a small core crew set to disembark before the ship sails onward to the Netherlands. Once they leave the vessel, evacuees will be transported directly to chartered aircraft organized by nationality for repatriation.
As of Friday, the WHO had confirmed six cases of hantavirus out of eight initial suspected cases on board, with no new suspected cases remaining. The ship had previously sailed from Cape Verde, where three infected passengers were evacuated earlier this month. The voyage began back on April 1, when the MV Hondius departed Ushuaia, Argentina for an Atlantic crossing to Cape Verde. Local Argentine health officials have concluded that the first infected passenger had an “almost zero chance” of contracting the virus in Ushuaia, based on the pathogen’s incubation period and other available data.
Health agencies across the globe have launched contact tracing operations for passengers who left the ship at earlier stops, as well as anyone who has had close contact with known infected people. A KLM flight attendant who had brief exposure to one infected passenger and developed mild symptoms tested negative for the virus, the WHO confirmed Friday. That infected passenger, the wife of the first fatality in the outbreak, was removed from a Johannesburg-to-Amsterdam flight before takeoff on April 25 and died the next day in a South African hospital.
In Spain, a woman who was on that same flight and developed symptoms has been placed in isolation in a hospital in the eastern part of the country while awaiting test results. Two Singaporean passengers who were on the MV Hondius tested negative but remain in quarantine as a precaution, Singaporean health authorities announced Friday. British health officials also reported a suspected case on Tristan da Cunha, a remote Atlantic island settlement home to roughly 220 residents.
