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World Health Organisation chief addresses COVID trauma amid global hantavirus fears as MV Hondius approaches the docks of Tenerife

The cruise ship managing a hantavirus outbreak is set to dock within hours.

Four Australians are among the 140 people onboard and a rigorous plan is place to process the passengers and crew, but despite assurances the virus is low-risk for transmission, the world in the wake of COVID fears the worst is yet to come.

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World Health Organisation director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus on Sunday morning landed in Tenerife, in the Canary Islands, where the is the MV Hondius is set to dock at roughly 5pm.

Tedros came to assure locals that, while hantavirus has spread to eight people on the ship, killing three and leaving a fourth fighting for life, the virus remains “low risk” and is “not another COVID-19.”

But the WHO chief acknowledged the global fears around the possibility of another pandemic, and the concerns of local port workers who protested on Friday about communication around protocols, and a lack of security.

“The concern is legitimate, because we have all experienced COVID, especially in 2020, and that turmoil is still in our minds,” he said.

Tedros said WHO did not make its public health assessment “lightly.”

World Health Organisation director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus landed in Tenerife to address global concerns about the spread of hantavirus once the cruise ship docks.
World Health Organisation director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus landed in Tenerife to address global concerns about the spread of hantavirus once the cruise ship docks. Credit: 7NEWS
The MV Hondius cruise ship is hours away from docking in the Canary Islands.
The MV Hondius cruise ship is hours away from docking in the Canary Islands. Credit: Arilson Almeida/AP

Despite the low-risk, a strong logistical mission is about the play out to ensure all precautions are taken.

When the MV Hondius docks in Tenerife, it will anchor offshore, and smaller boats will head out to cruise ship to ferry passengers back to shore, where they will be medically examined at facilities set up on the docks.

Passengers who do not have any symptoms will take a 10-minute journey to the airport, and board specific repatriation flights to their respective home countries.

They will not be permitted to remain in Spain, or book commercial flights home.

The quarantining plans for some of the 23 nations set to receive passengers have released their plans for quarantining.

Some will head to quarantine facilities, others hospitals, with one source telling CNN that the Americans will be brought back aboard a charter aircraft with a biocontainment unit, similar to those used during COVID-19 evacuations.

Spain is preparing for the arrival of the MV Hondius cruise ship in the Canary Islands.
Spain is preparing for the arrival of the MV Hondius cruise ship in the Canary Islands. Credit: AAP
Workers in Tenerife have set up temporary shelters where MV Hondius passengers are expected.
Workers in Tenerife have set up temporary shelters where MV Hondius passengers are expected. Credit: AAP

The Australian government has not made clear how it plans to process the four Australian citizens and permanent resident onboard, but an Australian consular official will be on the ground in Tenerife to help get them home.

Australian health authorities are also working with states and territories on quarantine, testing and health monitoring protocols for the returning travellers under the coordination of the Australian Centre for Disease Control.

Docks workers protested the cruise ship landing location in Tenerife on Friday.

There are four Australians and one permanent resident set to disembark the ship in the Canary Islands and head home on Sunday.
There are four Australians and one permanent resident set to disembark the ship in the Canary Islands and head home on Sunday. Credit: 7NEWS

What we know about the virus

People are usually infected by hantavirus through contact with infected rodents or their urine, their droppings or their saliva.

Human-to-human transmission is rare, but can happen in cases of extremely close-contact with the Andes strain detected in cruise ship patients and crew.

“Although uncommon, limited human to human transmission has been reported in previous outbreaks of Andes virus,” WHO said.

Limited spread among close contacts has been observed in some previous outbreaks with the Andes strain, which has spread in South America, including Argentina, where the cruise trip started in March.

Argentine officials investigating the outbreak’s origins anonymously told The Associated Press the leading theory is that the couple contracted the virus during a bird-watching tour in the city of Ushuaia before boarding.

They said the couple visited a landfill during the bird-watching tour where they may have been exposed to rodents carrying the infection.

The MV Hondius first left Ushuaia in Argentina over a month ago.

The MV Hondius cruise ship was anchored at Cape Verde and is now on its way to the Canary Islands.
The MV Hondius cruise ship was anchored at Cape Verde and is now on its way to the Canary Islands. Credit: Arilson Almeida/AP

“The extent of passenger contact with local wildlife during the voyage, or prior to boarding in Ushuaia remains undetermined,” WHO said.

On their voyage, passengers visited some of the world’s most remote islands, where they would have seen a lot of wildlife, including whales, dolphins, penguins and seabirds, according to the trip’s itinerary.

Hantavirus typically incubates for one to six weeks before patients start presenting symptoms.

— With Reuters/CNN/AP

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