90-Second Read: Quarantine over for almost all Hantavirus ship passengers and crew
Editorial voice
Amara Mensah
Published
Published June 18, 2026
ALMOST ALL THE passengers and crew of the cruise ship hit by a deadly Hantavirus outbreak who had to quarantine in the Netherlands are now allowed to return home, the WHO chief said Thursday. And on 8 June, St Helena, where many passengers disembarked, announced the conclusion of the Hantavirus major incident declared on the remote British island, home to around 4,400 close-knit people. The Andes species behind the Hondius outbreak is the only strain of Hantavirus known to be able to jump from human-to-human. There were 12 confirmed and one probable case stemming from the MV Hondius, including three deaths.
The Dutch-flagged ship set off 1 April from Ushuaia, Argentina, taking in remote islands in the South Atlantic Ocean before heading north to Cape Verde, then Tenerife in Spain's Canary Islands, where remaining passengers were evacuated. The polar exploration ship docked on 18 May in Rotterdam harbour in the Netherlands, Europe's largest port, with the skeleton crew facing weeks of quarantine. With no new cases reported in over… pic.twitter.com/rpwcCbsHds He said that "with no new cases reported in over deaths reported since 2 May, the situation remains stable". An account is an optional way to support the work we do.
You are visiting us because we have something you value. Two Irish people who were on board the cruise ship were quarantining here in a HSE-run facility. On 30 May, the ship was cleared to put to sea again after cleaning and disinfection. All individuals who were identified as contacts and required to self-isolate have now successfully completed their mandatory 42-day isolation periods.
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Original reporting
Based on reporting from The Journal. Read the original source for full details.
Source published Jun 18, 5:05 PM EDT. Hantavirus Now reviewed reporting from The Journal and summarized the key points below.
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