Passengers arrive on a second evacuation flight from
Tenerife at
Eindhoven air base, the
Netherlands. The flight, organised by
Australia, carried several Australian passengers, a
New Zealander and a
British passenger from the cruise ship
MV Hondius, which was affected by a
hantavirus outbreak. Photograph: Rob Engelaar/EPA View image in fullscreen Passengers arrive on a second evacuation flight from
Tenerife at
Eindhoven air base, the
Netherlands. The flight, organised by
Australia, carried several Australian passengers, a
New Zealander and a
British passenger from the cruise ship
MV Hondius, which was affected by a
hantavirus outbreak. Photograph: Rob Engelaar/EPA ‘Difficult’ mission to repatriate Australian hantavirus cruise passengers en route to long
Perth quarantine Health minister
Mark Butler says six people from MC Hondius plus flight crew from charter plane to be isolated for weeks Follow our
Australia news live blog for latest updates Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast Australians and New Zealanders who were aboard the deadly hantavirus-hit cruise ship have been taken to the
Netherlands after a last-minute change of plan on what the health minister called a “difficult” mission. Once back in
Australia they will undergo the first three weeks of a 42-day quarantine at the
Centre for National Resilience in Bullsbrook, just outside
Perth. The flight crew that brings them back to the country will also have to quarantine, either in
Australia or at their home base in another country,
Australia’s health minister,
Mark Butler, said. But the six people who had been travelling aboard the
MV Hondius will first spend up to two days in the
Netherlands, instead of returning direct from
Tenerife. They landed in the
Netherlands on Tuesday morning, Australian time, on the first leg of a complex operation to repatriate them, Butler said. There they were greeted – at a safe distance – by the Australian ambassador,
Greg Fench. View image in fullscreen The
Centre for National Resilience in Bullsbrook. Photograph: Multiplex All were in “good health and relatively good spirits”, Butler said on Tuesday. But additional hantavirus cases that came to light overnight, including a French national who was in hospital in a critical condition, show there was “a relatively low risk [but] still a risk of transmission among the passengers of this cruise ship”, he added. The passengers were taken to a quarantine hotel before a charter flight takes them to
Australia later this week. “This is a difficult arrangement to make,” Butler told ABC News on Tuesday morning. “You’ve got to have crew that are willing to isolate at the end of the flight, you’ve got to have a flight that has some refuelling arrangements put in place between the
Netherlands and
Australia … And it’s important that we’ve put those quarantine arrangements in place, ready to go when they do land in
Australia.” The government nevertheless expected the four Australians, one permanent resident and one New Zealand citizen to be back in
Australia by the end of the week. “They’re only able to stay in the
Netherlands for a maximum of 48 hours. So, over the next 24 to 48 hours, we expect them to start their flight back to
Australia,” Butler said. Medical personnel will be on board the flight, which is expected to land at RAAF Base Pearce in
Perth, according to government advice. The travellers will then be transported to quarantine facilities at the
Centre for National Resilience in Bullsbrook, where they will isolate for the first three weeks of a 42-day quarantine period. The centre will be staffed by medical personnel from the National Critical Care and Trauma Response Centre in Darwin, which was set up in 2002 in response to the Bali bombing. “It has very high experience in dealing with infectious disease emergencies and a range of other medical emergencies, both here in
Australia and across the region,” Butler said. Flight crew will also quarantine at Bullsbrook or in another country if they decide to immediately fly out, Butler said. None of the passengers have displayed symptoms of hantavirus, and no other Australian citizens or permanent residents were known to be on board the ship. Later, at a press conference, Butler said hantavirus had been listed under
Australia’s Biosecurity Act, to allow him to make quarantine orders. He said the orders “will ensure that Australians can all have confidence that there is no risk to the broader Australian community from this tragedy that’s happened on a cruise ship over the other side of the world”. The World Health Organization has recommended but not mandated a 42-day quarantine for the travellers due to the long incubation period of hantavirus. The virus can cause flu-like symptoms leading to respiratory arrest and death in some cases. Butler said
Australia’s measures were “probably the strongest quarantine response of any country that is taking passengers back from this cruise ship”. “Most countries are only requiring their returning citizens to go into some sort of centralised quarantine, like a hospital or a centre like the one we’re using in Western
Australia, for two or three days,” he said. Oceanwide Expeditions confirmed on Monday that all guests and some crew who had been on the ship had been either repatriated to their home countries or to the
Netherlands. Twenty-five crew members remain on board, as does the body of a German guest who died on the ship on 2 May. Explore more on these topics Hantavirus Health Australian politics Western
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