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90-Second Read: Hantavirus-stricken cruise ship arrives at Spain’s Canary Islands

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Elena Park

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Published May 13, 2026

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This is a simplified summary of outside reporting. Hantavirus Now did not independently report the original story. Read the original source for full details.This is a simplified summary of outside reporting. Hantavirus Now did not independently report the original story. Read the original source for full details.

Passengers and some of the crew are expected to evacuate before the ship, where an outbreak of Hantavirus led to the deaths of three people, continues on its way to the Netherlands. A flight attendant on the Dutch airline KLM, who came into contact with an infected passenger from the cruise ship and later showed mild symptoms, tested negative for Hantavirus, the WHO said Friday. Spanish authorities said a woman on that flight was being tested for Hantavirus, having developed symptoms at home in eastern Spain. Three passengers from the ship, a Dutch husband and wife and a German woman, have died, while others have fallen sick with the rare disease, which usually spreads among rodents.

Cruise operator Oceanwide Expeditions said earlier that "all guests and a limited number of crew members" were expected to begin to leave the ship from around 0700 GMT (9 p.m. The passenger, the wife of the first person to die in the outbreak, had briefly been on a plane bound from Johannesburg to the Netherlands on April 25, but was removed before takeoff. British health authorities also said Friday there was a suspected case on Tristan da Cunha, one of the world's most isolated settlements with around 220 people. The Dutch-flagged MV Hondius arrived at the Spanish port of Granadilla escorted by a Civil Guard vessel, journalists reported, confirmed by data from the maritime tracking service VesselFinder.

But the risk to the general public and the people of the Canaries remained low, she added. Despite the situation, daily life appeared largely normal: some people were swimming, others shopping at the market or sitting at cafe terraces. Instead, it will remain offshore while passengers are screened and evacuated between Sunday and Monday, the only window health officials say the weather will allow. The MV Hondius left Ushuaia, Argentina, on April 1 for a cruise across the Atlantic Ocean to Cape Verde.

The WHO said Friday it had confirmed six cases out of eight suspected ones. Unlike other news outlets, we haven't put up a paywall. Provincial health official Juan Petrina said there was an "almost zero chance" the Dutch man linked to the outbreak contracted the disease in Ushuaia based on the virus's incubation period, among other factors.

Source reference

Original reporting

Based on reporting from The Times of Israel. Read the original source for full details.

Source published May 10, 2:54 AM EDT. Hantavirus Now reviewed reporting from The Times of Israel and summarized the key points below.

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