Australians from hantavirus-hit cruise ship arrive home to quarantine


SYDNEY, May 15 (Reuters) - ⁠Australian citizens who were on a Dutch-flagged luxury ⁠cruise ship hit by a deadly hantavirus outbreak ‌returned home on Friday and will isolate for at least three weeks at a quarantine facility.

Four Australian citizens, a permanent resident and one ​resident of New Zealand landed at ⁠an Australian air force ⁠base near Perth in Western Australia on a government-chartered ⁠flight, ‌local media reported.

Federal Health Minister Mark Butler said all members of the group had tested ⁠negative and did not display symptoms of the ​virus before ‌they boarded the flight in the Netherlands.

"They will be ⁠transported immediately ​to the quarantine facility that's effectively next door, and they will be tested again," Butler told Sky News.

Eleven passengers ⁠on the MV Hondius have contracted ​the virus and three have died, according to the World Health Organization.

The WHO has recommended a 42-day quarantine for all ⁠passengers and health experts have urged calm, noting the virus is far less contagious than COVID-19 and poses little risk to the wider public.

The hantavirus is primarily ​spread by rodents but can, in ⁠rare cases, be transmitted between people. It typically begins ​with flu-like symptoms, such as fatigue ‌and fever, one to eight ​weeks after exposure, according to the WHO.

(Reporting by Renju Jose in Sydney; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)

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