Hantavirus cruise ship arrives in Tenerife, passengers expected to return home

The ship’s arrival will see all 147 passengers, including four Australians, disembark.

Laura Sharman
CNN
The cruise ship MV Hondius arrives at the port of Granadilla de Abona in Tenerife, Spain on May 10, 2026.
The cruise ship MV Hondius arrives at the port of Granadilla de Abona in Tenerife, Spain on May 10, 2026. Credit: Reuters

The cruise ship at the center of the hantavirus outbreak has arrived at the Spanish island of Tenerife, where its 147 passengers are expected to disembark in a carefully managed repatriation operation involving multiple nations.

MV Hondius will anchor at the Port of Granadilla, in the Canary Islands, and the passengers will be evacuated to their home countries after tests to confirm they remain without symptoms, officials said.

Since the vessel departed Argentina last month, the deaths of three people have been linked to hantavirus — a rare disease typically caused by exposure to infected rodents’ urine or faeces — while others have been evacuated from the ship for medical treatment.

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The ship will anchor at “the safest” distance from the dock, local officials said, and passengers will be brought ashore by nationality in small boats with a maximum capacity of 10 people, according to the tour operator Oceanwide Expeditions.

Several nations — including the US, Germany, France, Belgium, Ireland and the Netherlands — are sending aircraft to evacuate their nationals who were on the ship.

Four Australians will also be evacuated from the ship.

The cruise ship has docked in the Canary Islands.
The cruise ship has docked in the Canary Islands. Credit: 7NEWS

“The sequence of disembarkation will be coordinated with arriving repatriation flights,” Oceanwide said, adding that passengers’ luggage would remain on the ship and be returned to them later.

A US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention official said that the 17 American passengers —none of whom have symptoms — will be transported to the University of Nebraska Medical Center, which is home to the National Quarantine Unit, a federally funded facility.

After briefly being assessed at the unit, the passengers will then be able to undergo home-based monitoring over the next 42 days, the official said, with monitoring expected to be at least daily.

Fourteen Spanish passengers are expected to disembark the vessel first and will wear FFP2 masks – along with those involved in bus transfers and logistics, said Mónica García, Spain’s health minister, on Saturday.

Passengers will be taken off the ship in groups based on nationality.
Passengers will be taken off the ship in groups based on nationality. Credit: 7NEWS

They will be taken to a military hospital, where they will stay in individual rooms with no visitors allowed, and will receive a PCR test upon arrival and another seven days later, Spain’s health ministry said.

The boat’s arrival has caused tensions in the Canary Islands, an autonomous community of Spain, with the territory’s leader Fernando Clavijo saying earlier in the week that he was opposed to the ship docking there.

Port workers in Tenerife have also held protests, voicing their concerns about a lack of communication about the potential risks.

The ship and its crew are scheduled to continue to Rotterdam in the Netherlands, where the crew will disembark and the ship will be disinfected.

The hantavirus outbreak was first reported to the World Health Organization on May 2 and remains a low risk to the general public, the WHO said.

Originally published on CNN

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