The variety of confirmed Hantavirus cases has risen to 6 because the 22 Brits stuck on the ship prepare to be flown back to the UK.
British nationals still on board MV Hondius can be flown home tomorrow and put in hotels to self-isolate.
Hantavirus has killed three people on board, with confirmed cases now rising to 6, and an additional two are suspected.
A brand new contact from the plane where a Dutch woman flew before dying a number of days after contracting the disease has also been identified.
Those evacuated from the ship can be expected to remain of their hotel rooms for 45 days.
None of those on board are showing symptoms of the rat-borne virus.
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MV Hondius to dock in Tenerife on Sunday
The MV Hondius cruise is to reach within the Canary Islands on Sunday.
Officials are working to organise a dedicated repatriation flight for British passengers.
Britons can be tested for hantavirus onboard the ship, and can be flown home the identical day in the event that they have a negative result and display no symptoms.
The vessel is on the right track to land in Tenerife on Sunday, subject to weather conditions.
US evacuating 17 residents from hantavirus cruise ship
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The US has shared its plan for medically repatriating 17 people on board MV Hondius.
Once the ship arrives within the Canary Islands, a US government medical flight will take passengers to Offutt Air Force Base in Omaha, Nebraska.
They are going to then be transported to the National Quarantine Center on the University of Nebraska.
Donald Trump said the virus ‘appears to be okay’, adding ‘it isn’t easy to pass on’.
He added: ‘We hope that’s true.’
Variety of confirmed hantavirus cases rises to 6
The variety of confirmed cases of hantavirus has risen from five to 6, the World Health Organisation has said.
Eight people in total have fallen in poor health, including three who’ve died.
There are actually six confirmed cases with two suspected cases.
4 patients remain in hospital.
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Dutch hantavirus victim’s body repatriated
The body of a Dutch woman who died after contracting hantavirus has been repatriated, South African officials have confirmed.
Health department spokesperson Foster Mogale told reporters the unnamed woman’s body was returned to the Netherlands on a KLM flight.
Posthumous tests have returned a positive result for hantavirus.
She was amongst dozens who left the MV Hondius while it was docked in St Helena.
It’s unclear whether the body of her 70-year-old husband, who also died within the outbreak, has been repatriated.
Spanish authorities preparing to welcome MV Hondius
Afternoon all, it’s Ryan Prosser to take you thru the evening.
Authorities in Tenerife are preparing to welcome the MV Hondius cruise ship.
Health officials have drawn up plans to evacuate the some 140 passengers and crew when the stricken vessel arrives within the Canary Islands.
At the very least three passengers have died, and a number of other others are sick. Not one of the remaining passengers or crew is currently showing symptoms.
Each the UK and the US are arranging flights to repatriate their residents. The WHO says the chance of hantavirus to the broader public stays low.
Passengers who disembarked the vessel before the outbreak was detected are being tracked by health authorities.
Those still on MV Hondius report no symptoms
The passengers who remain on the hantavirus-hit cruise ship will not be reporting any symptoms, the World Health Organisation has said.
Those that have been exposed to the virus have been asked to self-isolate with regular medical checks
The World Health Organisation’s technical officer Anais Legand said: ‘They can be asked to take their temperature each day for 42 days, they can be asked to examine day by day for other symptoms like feeling unwell or a headache
‘They can be supplied with someone to contact in the event that they’re not feeling well, it’s as much as the national authorities where people will go next.
Canary Islands’ president says it’s ‘time to collaborate’
The President of the Canary Islands has said ‘it’s time to collaborate’ after he was forced to permit MV Hondius to dock near Tenerife.
Fernando Clavijo has softened his stance after he was overruled by the Spanish courts for attempting to deny the hantavirus-hit ship from arriving in the realm.
He said: ‘[The Canary Islands] has been critical, and continues to be so, of the Spanish government’s decision regarding the MV Hondius
‘But now it’s time to act responsibly to make sure that operations go easily, that the passengers spend the least possible time within the islands, and that they will proceed their journey to their countries.
‘It’s time to collaborate, protect the islands and the people of the islands, and help.’
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In pictures: Protests erupt over ship docking in Tenerife


Patient with suspected hantavirus hospitalised in Alicante, Spain
A lady has been admitted to hospital in Spain with a suspected case of hantavirus.
The patient is known to have been a passenger on the identical flight as a Dutch woman who passed away on April 26, becoming the second person to die after contracting the virus on the cruise ship MV Hondius.
The girl is receiving treatment on the Sant Joan General Hospital in Alicante, local outlet EFE Noticias reports.
The publication also reported Spanish nationals coming off the ship – or who’ve had contact with confirmed cases – will face a compulsory quarantine period.
During this time they can be housed on the Gómez Ulla Hospital in Madrid, the country’s Public Health Commission said.
Two vials of hantavirus went missing from lab two years ago

Two vials of hantavirus went missing from an Australian lab two years before the recent outbreak on the cruise ship MV Hondius.
Out of the 300 vials that went missing in 2024, two contained the hantavirus, which causes the condition that has left three dead within the last two weeks.
On the time, it was thought the disappearance happened when the vials were being transferred to a brand new freezer.
But an investigation found they were probably destroyed slightly than stolen.The vials will not be connected with probably the most recent outbreak.
You’ll be able to read more here.
Hantavirus vaccine ‘could take years to approve’
Scientists are rushing to develop a vaccine for hantavirus but it is going to likely take years to approve.
Researchers on the University of Bath said they’re working ona ‘highly promising jab’.
Animals tested with the vaccine have shown ‘excellent immune responses’ and so they hope to maneuver on to human trials in the long run.
Jay Cooper, a virologist from the US Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, told Nature: ‘A significant barrier for hantavirus vaccines is funding for advanced development
‘Right away we’re pushing from the research side, but there is no such thing as a strong external pull, so progress is slower than it could possibly be. It’s frustrating – like pushing a rock up a hill for years.’
US classifies hantavirus emergency as ‘level three’
People in not less than three US states are being monitored for potential hantavirus infection.
State health services in Georgia are monitoring two residents, Arizona is monitoring one one who was on the ship and California said they’re working with an undisclosed variety of potential patients.
Donald Trump told reporters yesterday he had been briefed on the virus and he hopes it’s under control.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said: ‘The Department of State is leading a coordinated, whole-of-government response including direct contact with passengers, diplomatic coordination, and engagement with domestic and international health authorities.’
Mapped: Where has hantavirus ship MV Hondius been?
Dutch flight attendant tests negative for hantavirus

A Dutch flight attendant who was involved with a girl who died from hantavirus has tested negative.
The employee from KLM airline was taken to hospital in Amsterdam yesterday after showing mild symptoms.
She was involved with a 69-year-old Dutch woman who died after contracting the disease along with her husband.
In numbers: What number of British people have been affected by the hantavirus outbreak?
- Three British nationals are confirmed or suspected of getting hantavirus
- One is being treated in South Africa, one is being treated within the Netherlands and the opposite is being treated in Trista da Cunha
- Seven Brits disembarked the ship at St Helena following the primary death. 4 remain there and have been situated
- Two Brits who disembarked have been situated within the UK and are self-isolating
- One person has not yet been traced
Medical staff sent to St Helena
4 Brits who disembarked MV Hondius at St Helena after a person died on board have been situated.
They were amongst 30 passengers who left the ship together with the dead man’s wife, who also died a number of days later in Johannesburg.
The 4 Bits are actually believed to have symptoms but are involved with health officials.
Medical staff is anticipated to be sent to the island within the south Atlantic.
Third Brit suspected of getting hantavirus
A 3rd British citizen is feared to have hantavirus after an outbreak on MV Hondius.
The patient is on the Atlantic island of Tristan de Cunha where the ship stopped mid- April.
Two other British men are confirmed to have the disease after staying on the boat.
Martin Anstee was evacuated to a hospital within the Netherlands where he stays in stable condition. The opposite man, a British doctor, is in intensive care in South Africa.
Live coverage wraps up
It’s time to close our hantavirus live blog.
Thanks for following along.
French citizen on same flight as confirmed case has ‘symptoms’ despite not being on ship

A French national who was on the identical plane as a confirmed hantavirus case has developed ‘mild symptoms’ and gone into isolation, the French Health ministry has said.
There are eight French individuals who weren’t on the MV Hondius cruise but shared a flight with the lady who died after flying from St Helena to Johannesburg on April 25.
Tests are underway to seek out out what’s behind the symptoms experienced by the French national now in isolation, officials said.
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