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3 removed from hantavirus ship as Spain says it will stop in Canary Islands despite local opposition

Three patients are suspected having hantavirus They were evacuated from the MV Hondius and were on their way to the Netherlands for medical treatment, the World Health Organization said on Wednesday. The three are German, Dutch and British nationals, including a member of the British team, according to the WHO.

The unusual outbreak of this virus has killed three people who were traveling on the ship.

The cruise operator, Oceanwide Expeditions, said in a statement Wednesday night that a medical plane carrying two patients had arrived in the Netherlands, and that the second plane was currently delayed. The person on the second flight is in good condition. Oceanwide Expeditions did not provide details on the reason for the delay and said it would provide an update on arrival as soon as possible.

The UK Health Security Agency confirmed in a statement on Wednesday that one Briton had been evacuated from a ship to receive aid in the Netherlands. UKHSA also said it is aware of two other people who were on board the MV Hondius and have returned to the UK independently.

In the latest situation in the plight of about 150 passengers, the Spanish government confirmed on Wednesday what it announced earlier in the day, saying that the ship would stop in the Canary Islands, although the head of the local government rejected this plan earlier in the day.

In a statement on Wednesday night, Oceanwide Expeditions also confirmed that the ship left Cape Verde and is heading north on its way to the Canary Islands, a trip expected to take three to four days.

The plan announced on Tuesday, coordinated between the Spanish government and the WHO, was for the ship to head to the Canary Islands for “full investigation” and “full testing” after the three patients were discharged. But the island’s regional government leader, Fernando Clavijo, rejected the idea on Wednesday morning, saying he had requested a meeting with Spain’s Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez.

In a social media post, Clavijo, a member of Spain’s political opposition, wrote: “The Canary Islands are always responsible, but they cannot accept decisions made behind the Canary Islands’ institutions and without sufficient information for the people.”

The MV Hondius sailing from the port of Praia, the capital of Cape Verde, on May 6, 2026.

AFP via Getty Images


In a recent press conference, however, Spain’s health minister, Monica Garcia Gomez, doubled down on the plan, saying the ship would dock in Granadilla on the Canary island of Tenerife, “within three days.”

“A joint program of health checks and evacuations will be carried out to repatriate all passengers, unless their health condition prevents them,” he told reporters.

On Wednesday, José Domingo Regalado, the mayor of Granadilla de Abona in Tenerife, rejected the arrival of the MV Hondius in the industrial port and municipal property, saying that the move goes “against what is wanted.”

“What we are asking is that action be taken, because they can be transferred to the nearest airport in their countries so that they can live in isolation and be treated by their health system if they need it. And, in particular, that the ship is infected with high seas viruses and can be transported to a port where there are local people nearby,” he said.

Regarding Clavijo’s previous comments on the show, Gomez said he has been in “regular contact” with Clavijo and that he will participate in all meetings.

The flight that was scheduled to take the ship’s doctor, who was showing symptoms, to the Canary Islands was canceled early Wednesday, a source close to the regional president’s office told French news agency AFP.

Spain’s health ministry later announced that sick people would be treated in the Netherlands.

Operations to remove suspected hantavirus cases from the ship

Evacuation of suspected hantavirus patients following the outbreak of the MV Hondius, Praia, Cape Verde, May 6, 2026.

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus via X/ Reuters


Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, acting director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said in a statement Wednesday night that the CDC has been “coordinating with domestic and international partners” since learning about the outbreak.

The CDC was “preparing medical support” for all Americans aboard the ship, Bhattacharya said. Oceanwide Expeditions said there are 17 American passengers still aboard the Hondius.

Two Georgia residents who were present passengers on the Hondius, but have since returned to Georgia, have been monitored but have shown no signs of infection, the Georgia Department of Health said Wednesday.

“The safety and health of affected American travelers is our first priority,” Bhattacharya said.

South African authorities confirmed on Wednesday that they had identified the callers Andes is a type of hantavirus to two people who had been on the cruise. The Andes strain, found mainly in Argentina and Chile, can be transmitted from person to person, unlike other strains of the virus.

Swiss authorities announced on Wednesday that a man who had sailed and returned home at the end of April had also tested positive for the Andes virus, adding that “there is currently no risk to the Swiss public.”

The French Ministry of Health, meanwhile, told the country’s BFM TV network that France’s “contact case” had been confirmed. It is believed that the man traveled on the same plane as one of the two patients was transported to Johannesburg for treatment in late April.

There is currently another British national in intensive care in South Africa after the cruise, but French authorities may be referring to another patient who was flown to Johannesburg, a 69-year-old Dutch woman who the WHO said disembarked the ship with “abdominal symptoms” on April 24 and died two days later after her condition “deteriorated during the flight to Johannesburg.”

That brings the number of suspected or confirmed cases to nine, including three deaths, five confirmed to be receiving treatment and a French man, about whom few details have been given.

Oceanwide Expeditions said two infectious disease specialists were on their way Wednesday from the Netherlands to the sea and “will remain with the ship after its departure from Cape Verde.”

Operations to remove suspected hantavirus cases from the ship

A person wearing protective clothing walks next to an ambulance during the evacuation of suspected hantavirus patients, following the outbreak of the MV Hondius, in Praia, Cape Verde, on May 6, 2026.

Danilson Sequeira / REUTERS


The Dutch-flagged MV Hontius, a luxury liner, left Ushuaia, Argentina, on April 1. It has been docked in Cape Verde, an island off the west coast of Africa in the Atlantic, since Sunday.

The Ministry of Health in Argentina said in a statement on Wednesday that it is rescheduling the plan of the Dutch couple, who traveled to southern Argentina and Chile before the trip. It will also hold rats and analyzes in Ushuaia, the statement said.

So far, no cases related to the outbreak have been identified in Argentina, the health ministry said.

Ann Lindstrand, the WHO representative in Cape Verde, told Ramy Inocencio of CBS News on Tuesday that there is no risk of a pandemic threat with hantavirus given the small chance of human-to-human transmission.

Bhattacharya reiterated that guidance Wednesday, saying that hantavirus “is not spread by asymptomatic individuals, transmission requires close contact, and the risk to the American public is very low.”

Spanish and Dutch authorities are “discussing a lot” what will happen next to the passengers on the ship, he said. They were told to stay in their homes as much as possible.

“If there is a need for quarantine, that will be the decision of the health authorities in Spain or Holland at that time, in close cooperation with WHO advice,” Lindstrand said.

If necessary, quarantine can last up to two months, since the incubation period for hantavirus is between one and eight weeks, he added, noting that “eight weeks is a very long period of quarantine.”

Lindstrand said she had been in contact with a volunteer doctor on board who told her the passengers were “remarkably well,” although they were anxious to know what their next port of call would be.

“We’ve heard of a few people on board,” Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO director of epidemiology and pandemic preparedness and protection, said on Tuesday. “We just want you to know that we are working with the ship’s management. We are working with the countries you come from. We hear you. We know you are afraid.”

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