Against the backdrop of worldwide panic over hantavirus, it is now revealed that a passenger on board the infected MV Hondius visited a school on Tristan da Cunha (commonly known as Tristan), the most remote island in the world. It is a remote group of volcanic islands in the South Atlantic that is now suspected of being infected by an emerging mouse virus. It is one of three components of the British overseas territories Saint Helena, Ascension Island and Tristan da Cunha. Tristan has more than 200 residents who rely on ships arriving from South Africa for food and fuel, and the MV Hondius is one of themThe MV Hondius stopped off the coast of Tristan da Cunha in mid-April, three days after its first passenger died from hantavirus. Since there is no airstrip, the only way to reach the island is by sea, with approximately 10 boat trips departing from Cape Town each year.The UK Health and Safety Executive has identified a man who visited the island as a new suspected case and is believed to be still on the island.according to a Tristan’s Local BlogWhen the cruise ship arrived at the island, locals boarded the ship and several passengers disembarked. “Our last visit of the season was to the MV Hondius, and even though we were well into mid-April, the island continued to offer a perfect little weather window. She arrived on Tuesday morning, April 14, 2026, and cruised northeast of Tristan while clearing immigration,” the Tristan Blog said.Tristan da Cunha’s administrator, Philip Kendall, said in a statement that the infections on the MV Hondius were “of serious concern” for the island.
The United States enters level 3 state of emergency
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) activated its Emergency Operations Center and classified the hantavirus outbreak as “Level 3,” the lowest level of emergency activation and typical of the current situation. State health officials in Texas, Arizona, Georgia, California and Virginia confirmed to The Sun on Thursday that they were monitoring people who came off the ship.Hantaviruses are usually spread through contact with infected rodents, but the World Health Organization has confirmed that this strain of the virus, known as Andes virus, can be spread from person to person through close and prolonged contact.