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The evacuation of passengers from a cruise ship infected by a virus will be completed on Monday

Spain's Health Minister has announced that the evacuation of passengers from an?Australian-flagged luxury ship affected by a deadly outbreak of hantavirus will be completed Monday, with flights from the Netherlands and Australia.

Officials have announced that two flights from Australia will transport six passengers?from?the?Spanish Island of Tenerife? and one from the Netherlands will transport 18 passengers. Both flights will also carry passengers from other countries who did not send their repatriation flight, according to officials.

According to the World Health Organization's Friday tally, eight people who are no longer aboard the ship have become ill. Six of them have been confirmed as having contracted the virus. Three people have died, a Dutch couple as well as a German.

The U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services announced on Sunday that one of 17 Americans returning to the United States has tested positive for Andes virus strain, while another has mild symptoms.

According to the French health minister, a French passenger tested positive for this virus. The person's condition was also deteriorating. The WHO reported six cases, but it was unclear if the two French cases were among them.

On May?3, the MV Hondius carried 147 passengers, including crew. A cluster of severe respiratory illness among passengers was reported to WHO.

The vessel had already departed by then with 34 passengers. It sailed out of Argentina in March, stopping in Antarctica and other?locations, before heading north, to the waters west of Africa, off the coast of Cape Verde. Last week, the vessel was temporarily held in Cape Verde after it became aware of an outbreak. Health officials in Johannesburg first discovered the outbreak on May 2, after treating a British passenger who had been admitted to intensive care three weeks earlier after leaving the ship. The luxury ship left Cape Verde on Wednesday for Spain's Canary Islands, off West Africa. After the outbreak was discovered, the WHO and European Union requested that the country manage the evacuation. On Sunday and Monday, passengers will be flying from Tenerife to Canada, the Netherlands Turkey, Britain, Ireland and the United States. Some passengers were also flown to Madrid. The passengers will undergo testing upon arrival, and will then be transported to quarantine facilities or hospitals. Maria Van Kerkhove said that the WHO recommends a quarantine of 42 days for all passengers on board from Sunday.

On Monday evening, thirty crew members will stay on board the ship and sail it to the Netherlands where the vessel will be disinfected.

Health officials reminded a public that was still scarred by the COVID-19 Pandemic, that the virus is less contagious than the COVID-19 and poses little risk to the population as a whole.

In an interview with CNN, acting U.S. CDC director Jay Bhattacharya said that the 17 U.S. ship passengers would have the option of being isolated at home or in a Nebraska facility.

The Spanish health ministry has also played down the risks to the general population. The ministry added that no rodents were found aboard the ship. Reporting by Bureaus; Writing by Raju Gopikrishnan, Editing by Stephen Coates

(source: Reuters)