First group of Spanish passengers disembarks from hantavirus-hit cruise ship
Spanish nationals are leaving first as more than 20 countries coordinate evacuations and medical monitoring for passengers exposed to hantavirus.
- On Sunday, passengers from the cruise ship MV Hondius disembarked in Tenerife, Canary Islands, beginning their repatriation aboard military and government aircraft to more than 20 countries.
- The Hondius departed Argentina on April 1 carrying 114 passengers and 61 crew members; the vessel later encountered an Andes strain hantavirus outbreak that has killed three people.
- Operator Oceanwide Expeditions reports that none of the 147 people currently aboard are symptomatic, with a methodical evacuation procedure coordinating passengers of more than 20 different nationalities.
- Acting Director Dr. Jay Bhattacharya of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said remaining U.S. passengers will be transported to the University of Nebraska Medical Center for 42 days of monitoring, not quarantine.
- World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus is personally overseeing the operation in Tenerife, assuring residents, "This is not another COVID," while praising the island's response with "grace, solidarity and compassion.
306 Articles
306 Articles
After the Hantavirus outbreak on a cruise ship, two more passengers have been tested positively for the pathogen - a French woman and an American. Meanwhile, the evacuation of "Hondius" is almost complete.
Trump Sparks Outrage by Calling Hantavirus Concerns 'False Pandemics' and Rejecting Future Lockdowns
President Trump's dismissal of hantavirus concerns as 'false pandemics' amid a cruise ship outbreak has sparked outrage and debate over US health preparedness and policy.
Evacuate the passengers of the Hondius, asymptomatic the six infected. The four Italians in quarantine are well. The Ministry of Health: "There is no risk pandemic" . They were the 14 Spanish citizens the first to leave the shipMt Hondius, where an outbreak of Hantavirus has exploded that has provoked three victims, arrived yesterday to the industrial port of Granadilla, in the island of Tenerife. The Dutch boat, with on board 149 people of 23 n…
While MV Hondius docked at the port of Tenerife on Sunday, 10 May, Spanish journalist Álvaro Oliver González followed the operations as closely as possible. He tells of his day in La Dépêche du Midi.
The controversy over the landing of the hantavirus cruise forced on the Canary Islands by the government of Sánchez continues to gain weight as the hours pass and new dislates are known that question the effectiveness of the protocols applied to avoid risks of contagion. Thus, this Sunday afternoon, hours after the departure of passengers from the MV Hondius anchored in the port of Tínerfeño of Granadilla, OKDIARIO has been able to confirm, by s…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 56% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium


































