Two women on the hantavirus cruise ship are now quarantining at a HSE-run facilityTOPSHOT - An aerial view of an ambulance boat carrying crew members wearing hazmat suits as they approach the pilot door on the starboard side of the cruise ship MV Hondius, while stationary off the port of Praia, the capital of Cape Verde, on May 5, 2026. Two seriously ill crew members on a cruise ship stricken by a deadly hantavirus outbreak will be evacuated via Cape Verde to the Netherlands, allowing the vessel to sail on to Spain's Canary Islands, the ship operator said Tuesday.
The MV Hondius has been at the centre of an international health scare since Saturday, when WHO was informed that the rare disease -- usually spread from infected rodents typically through urine, droppings and saliva -- was suspected of being behind the deaths of three of its passengers.
As others fell ill, passengers and crew have been in isolation after Cape Verde authorities barred the ship from docking, and as health authorities scrambled to find a port that would take the Hondius. (Photo by AFP via Getty Images)

Two Irish citizens were stranded on the cruise ship(Image: AFP via Getty Images)

An Irishwoman facing 42 days in quarantine after being aboard the hantavirus cruise is “delighted” to be home, her friend has said.

Ann Lane, from Cork, and her travelling companion, from Dublin, were the only Irish people on the ship that has caused worldwide fear of another pandemic. The two women are currently isolating at a HSE-run facility after being flown from Tenerife to Baldonnell Airport, Dublin, last night on the government jet.

They were aboard the MV Hondius which saw an outbreak of hantavirus resulting in three deaths. Independent Senator Aubrey McCarthy, a friend of 80-year-old Ms Lane, who worked as a personal assistant to former president Mary Robinson and Labour Party leader Ivana Bacik, said she is “all good and absolutely delighted to be back”.

He told RTÉ Radio 1’s Today with David McCullagh: “It was a huge relief to Ann and all her friends to see that she made it safely back. We are quick to criticise the Irish when they get it wrong but this was second to none. They executed a perfect mission and it got them safely back to Ireland.”

Mr McCarthy said the two women are “very positive” and that Ms Lane is a “very strong lady”. He continued: “It must have been psychologically exhausting sitting on a ship not knowing what’s going to happen.

“You’re hearing the medical updates, the texts from home about the uncertainty on the virus and I’m sure that takes a toll on anybody and I know the emotional sides have a huge toll but being back on home soil, even though you have to quarantine, you are physically safe and at least you are home.”

Asked how his friend will cope with being in quarantine for 42 days, the senator said: “She will absolutely play by the rules. This is her sixth expedition and her fourth time to Antarctica, it’s important now that she gets proper medical guidance.

“It’s important that she also gets privacy during that time. Imagine you are going away on a trip you don’t realise how valuable home is until you can’t get there.” Some 149 passengers and crew had been stranded on the cruise ship since the deadly hantavirus was detected on it as it sailed from South America across the Atlantic Ocean on April 11.

Five people are confirmed to have contracted the rat-borne disease on board – and three of them have died – in what has now become a major public health emergency.

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