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7 Cases Of Deadly Hantavirus Confirmed Or Suspected On Stranded Cruise Ship

AMSTERDAM, May 5 (Reuters) – Two cases of fatal hantavirus have been confirmed and five more cases are suspected among people who fell ill on a cruise ship that was stranded off the coast of Cape Verde and unable to disembark passengers, the World Health Organization said.

In its most detailed update on the outbreak published late Monday, the U.N. health agency said the risk to the wider public was low from a disease that usually spreads from infected rodents and is rarely passed between humans.

However, he added that limited human-to-human transmission has been reported in some strains of the virus.

Authorities in Cape Verde, an island country in the Atlantic off the coast of West Africa, said they did not allow the Dutch-flagged MV Hondius to dock as a precaution.

3 People Died, Nearly 150 People Were Trapped on the Boat

About 150 people were stranded on the Hondius, which was carrying mostly British, American and Spanish passengers on a luxury cruise that set off from the southern tip of Argentina in late March. The cruise visited the Antarctic peninsula, South Georgia and Tristan da Cunha, some of the most remote islands on the planet.

The cruise ship MV Hondius docked at the port of Praia in Cape Verde on May 4, 2026.

The seven confirmed or suspected cases included three people who died, one critically ill and three with mild symptoms, WHO said.

Authorities said the three people who died were a Dutch couple and a German citizen, while a British citizen was evacuated from the ship and was in intensive care in South Africa.

WHO Says Risk to Wider Public Is Low

As a precaution, passengers on the Hondius ship were instructed to stay in their cabins as much as possible, WHO said, adding that the incubation period can last several weeks, which means some people may not yet show symptoms.

The World Health Organization said that epidemiological investigations are continuing to determine the source of the epidemic. Medical teams in Cape Verde are evaluating patients and collecting additional samples for testing.

The WHO added that Andean virus, a type of hantavirus found in Argentina and Chile, “has been reported in community settings with close and prolonged contact” despite rare and limited human-to-human transmission.

The first Dutch couple to die had traveled through South America, including Argentina, before boarding the cruise ship.

We Are Looking For A Safe Harbor

The ship’s operator, Oceanwide Expeditions, said authorities were working on a plan to medically evacuate the two sick people on board, as well as one of the passengers traveling with one of the deceased passengers.

The company said there are no definitive plans yet to disembark guests staying on the ship. He only confirmed that it would not be held in Cape Verde.

“It is being considered to go to Las Palmas or Tenerife, where further medical screenings and interventions can be carried out, organized and supervised by the WHO and Dutch health services. This has not yet been confirmed,” the statement said.

A spokesman for the Spanish Ministry of Health told Reuters that there had been no requests to dock in the Canary Islands yet.

Campaign Started in Southern Argentina

Hondius left Ushuaia in southern Argentina in March on a trip marketed as an Antarctic nature cruise, with mooring prices ranging from 14,000 to 22,000 euros ($16,000 to $25,000), according to company documents.

The first affected passenger, a Dutchman, died on April 11. Oceanwide Expeditions said his body remained on the ship until April 24, when he “disembarked at St Helena where he accompanied his wife back to her country.”

His wife, who had gastrointestinal symptoms when she disembarked, later deteriorated during her flight to Johannesburg. He died on arrival at the emergency room on April 26, the WHO said, adding that contact tracing was ongoing for passengers on that flight.

South African officials have confirmed that a British patient being treated at a hospital in Johannesburg has tested positive for hantavirus. The Netherlands confirmed that the virus was detected in the deceased Dutch woman.

(Reporting by Chandni Shah in Bengaluru and Charlotte Van Campenhout in Amsterdam; Additional reporting by David Latona and Monica Naime; Writing by Ingrid Melander and Charlotte Van Campenhout; Editing by Nia Williams and Andrew Heavens)

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