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Cruise ship awaits help after suspected hantavirus outbreak kills three

04 May 2026
This content originally appeared on Trinidad Guardian.
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A Dutch cruise ship with near­ly 150 peo­ple aboard, in­clud­ing 17 Amer­i­cans, was wait­ing for help off the coast of Cape Verde in the At­lantic Ocean on Mon­day af­ter a sus­pect­ed out­break of the rare han­tavirus killed three pas­sen­gers and left at least three oth­ers se­ri­ous­ly ill, the World Health Or­ga­ni­za­tion and the ship’s op­er­a­tor said.

The MV Hondius, which was on a week­s­long po­lar cruise from Ar­genti­na to Antarc­ti­ca and then sev­er­al iso­lat­ed is­lands in the South At­lantic, had re­quest­ed help from lo­cal health au­thor­i­ties on Sun­day af­ter mak­ing its way to the is­land of Cape Verde off the coast of West Africa, but no one has yet been al­lowed to dis­em­bark, the com­pa­ny op­er­at­ing the cruise said.

There are 88 pas­sen­gers — in­clud­ing one who has died — and 61 crew mem­bers, two of whom are sick, on­board, the op­er­a­tor said Mon­day. The pas­sen­gers in­clude 17 Amer­i­cans, 19 from the U.K. and 13 from Spain, among oth­er na­tion­al­i­ties.

The three pas­sen­gers to die were from the Nether­lands and Ger­many. The Ger­man re­mains on board. A British man is in in­ten­sive care in South Africa.

A 70-year-old Dutch man who pre­sent­ed with fever, headache, ab­dom­i­nal pain and di­ar­rhea was the first vic­tim and died on­board on April 11, the ship’s Nether­lands-based op­er­a­tor Ocean­wide Ex­pe­di­tions said in a state­ment giv­ing new de­tails. His body was tak­en off the ves­sel near­ly two weeks lat­er on the British ter­ri­to­ry of Saint He­le­na, some 1,200 miles (1,900 kilo­me­ters) off the African coast, and was await­ing repa­tri­a­tion.

His 69-year-old wife was trans­ferred to South Africa at the same time but col­lapsed at a Jo­han­nes­burg air­port and died at a near­by hos­pi­tal, the South African De­part­ment of Health said.

The ship then sailed on to As­cen­sion Is­land, an­oth­er iso­lat­ed At­lantic out­post about 800 miles (1,300 kilo­me­ters) to the north, where a sick British man was tak­en off the ship and evac­u­at­ed to South Africa on April 27. He lat­er test­ed pos­i­tive for han­tavirus, a rare in­fec­tion spread by ro­dents that can cause se­ri­ous res­pi­ra­to­ry ill­ness or he­m­or­rhag­ic fever, the South African health de­part­ment said.

He is in a crit­i­cal con­di­tion and is now in in­ten­sive care in a South African hos­pi­tal, where he is be­ing kept iso­lat­ed, au­thor­i­ties said.

A third pas­sen­ger died on­board on Sat­ur­day and was iden­ti­fied as a Ger­man na­tion­al. The body is still on the ship, the cruise op­er­a­tor said. It spec­i­fied that the three deaths are not yet con­firmed to be han­tavirus as the on­ly per­son con­firmed to have the virus is the man in in­ten­sive care in South Africa.

WHO said that while on­ly one han­tavirus case was con­firmed through tests, the oth­er five cas­es were sus­pect­ed to be han­tavirus.

The cruise ship is ask­ing Cape Verde for help

Two crew mem­bers still on­board the Hondius — one British, one Dutch — need ur­gent med­ical care, Ocean­wide said, adding it was still await­ing per­mis­sion from lo­cal au­thor­i­ties in Cape Verde on Mon­day to evac­u­ate pas­sen­gers and crew mem­bers. The com­pa­ny said it was con­sid­er­ing mov­ing to one of the Span­ish is­lands of Las Pal­mas or Tener­ife if it couldn’t get peo­ple off the ship in Cape Verde.

The World Health Or­ga­ni­za­tion had said Sun­day that it was work­ing with lo­cal au­thor­i­ties and the ship’s op­er­a­tors to con­duct a “full pub­lic health risk as­sess­ment” and was try­ing to co­or­di­nate the evac­u­a­tion of the two sick peo­ple from the ship.

“De­tailed in­ves­ti­ga­tions are on­go­ing, in­clud­ing fur­ther lab­o­ra­to­ry test­ing, and epi­demi­o­log­i­cal in­ves­ti­ga­tions,” WHO said. “Med­ical care and sup­port are be­ing pro­vid­ed to pas­sen­gers and crew. Se­quenc­ing of the virus is al­so on­go­ing.”

The Dutch For­eign Min­istry said it was al­so ex­plor­ing the pos­si­bil­i­ties of evac­u­at­ing some peo­ple from the ship.

A Dutch or­ga­ni­za­tion called On Be­half of the Fam­i­ly is­sued a com­ment from rel­a­tives of a Dutch cou­ple who they said were on the cruise and had died in April.

“The beau­ti­ful jour­ney they ex­pe­ri­enced to­geth­er has been abrupt­ly and de­fin­i­tive­ly cut short. ... We wish to bring them home and com­mem­o­rate them in peace and pri­va­cy,” the state­ment said, with­out iden­ti­fy­ing the fam­i­ly.

Han­tavirus is rare and not of­ten spread per­son to per­son

Han­tavirus­es, which are found through­out the world, are a fam­i­ly of virus­es spread main­ly by con­tact with the urine or fe­ces of in­fect­ed ro­dents like rats and mice. They gained at­ten­tion af­ter ac­tor Gene Hack­man’s wife, Bet­sy Arakawa, died from han­tavirus in­fec­tion in New Mex­i­co last year. She was not im­me­di­ate­ly found and her ail­ing hus­band died around a week lat­er from heart dis­ease.

In rare cas­es, han­tavirus in­fec­tions can be spread be­tween peo­ple, WHO said. There is no spe­cif­ic treat­ment or cure, but ear­ly med­ical at­ten­tion can in­crease the chance of sur­vival.

Han­tavirus­es cause two se­ri­ous syn­dromes, ac­cord­ing to the U.S. Cen­ters for Dis­ease Con­trol and Pre­ven­tion: han­tavirus pul­monary syn­drome, af­fect­ing the lungs, and he­m­or­rhag­ic fever with re­nal syn­drome, af­fect­ing the kid­neys.

“While se­vere in some cas­es, it is not eas­i­ly trans­mit­ted be­tween peo­ple,” Dr. Hans Hen­ri P. Kluge, WHO Re­gion­al Di­rec­tor for Eu­rope, said in a state­ment Mon­day. “The risk to the wider pub­lic re­mains low. There is no need for pan­ic or trav­el re­stric­tions.”

The week­s­long cruise start­ed in Ar­genti­na

South Africa’s De­part­ment of Health said the ship had left Ushua­ia in south­ern Ar­genti­na for a cruise that in­clud­ed vis­its to Antarc­ti­ca, the Falk­land Is­lands, South Geor­gia and oth­er iso­lat­ed is­lands in the South At­lantic.

While Ocean­wide Ex­pe­di­tions didn’t say ex­act­ly which cruise the ship was on, it ad­ver­tis­es 33-night or 43-night “At­lantic Odyssey” cruis­es on the 107-me­ter (351-foot) -long Hondius on its web­site that fol­low that route.

The Hondius has 80 cab­ins and a ca­pac­i­ty of 170 pas­sen­gers, the com­pa­ny said. It typ­i­cal­ly trav­els with around 70 crew mem­bers, in­clud­ing a doc­tor, it said.

Though there was no in­for­ma­tion from au­thor­i­ties on the pos­si­ble source of the sus­pect­ed out­break, a pre­vi­ous han­tavirus out­break in south­ern Ar­genti­na in 2019 killed at least nine peo­ple. It prompt­ed a judge to or­der dozens of res­i­dents of a re­mote town to stay in their homes for 30 days to halt the spread.

South Africa’s Na­tion­al In­sti­tute for Com­mu­ni­ca­ble Dis­eases, mean­while, was con­duct­ing con­tact trac­ing in the Jo­han­nes­burg re­gion to iden­ti­fy if oth­er peo­ple in South Africa were ex­posed to the in­fect­ed cruise ship pas­sen­gers. The 69-year-old woman who died was try­ing to catch a flight back home to the Nether­lands at Jo­han­nes­burg’s main in­ter­na­tion­al air­port, re­gard­ed as the busiest in Africa, when she col­lapsed.

“There is no need for (the) pub­lic to pan­ic,” South Africa’s health de­part­ment said, adding WHO was “co­or­di­nat­ing a mul­ti­coun­try re­sponse with all af­fect­ed is­lands and coun­tries to con­tain fur­ther spread of the dis­ease.”

AP writer Mike Corder in The Hague, Nether­lands, con­tributed.

By GER­ALD IM­RAY

CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP)