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'Patient zero' in deadly hantavirus cruise outbreak identified as birdwatcher who visited landfill known as 'the end of the world'
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- WHO leadership will oversee evacuations from the hantavirus-stricken Hondius and directly address Tenerife residents, emphasizing that this is not another COVID and that the risk remains low.
- Spain plans to evacuate passengers under strict health protocols in Tenerife, with medical checks before disembarkation and limited hand luggage for travelers.
- Canada’s Canary Islands authorities stress a narrow evacuation window, with timing around midday Sunday as the safest period before changing weather conditions.
- Health authorities warn that the Hondius evacuation must be completed within 24 hours of arrival to avoid weather-driven delays.
- The Hondius outbreak has prompted international coordination, with the EU civil protection mechanism activated to support evacuation by air if needed.
- Dutch and Spanish authorities are coordinating repatriations, with some nationalities to be quarantined on arrival and others allowed home quarantine if asymptomatic.
- WHO Director-General Tedros publicly reassured Tenerife residents that the virus risk remains low and urged calm while coordinating disembarkation efforts.
- The Hondius has already traveled from Cape Verde after fatalities and infections were reported, with US evacuees planned to be quarantined on return.
- Evacuation logistics reflect broader travel-risk concerns, echoing analyses that remote expeditions spur protective measures and medical capacity considerations.
- Travel-risk experts say the Hondius incident is unlikely to dampen demand for remote expeditions, but call for scrutiny of evacuation protections and medical capacity.
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