“It’s starting…” South Africa is facing a chilling new development in the hantavirus scare as the first person has now developed symptoms after disembarking an Airlink flight connected to the deadly cruise ship outbreak.
Health authorities have confirmed that an individual who was on the same flight as a confirmed hantavirus victim is now exhibiting early warning signs, raising fresh fears that the virus may be spreading beyond the original ship passengers.
Floating death trap: The MV Hondius nightmare
What began as a luxury Antarctic expedition on the Dutch-flagged MV Hondius has turned into an international health emergency. The ship left Argentina with 147 passengers and crew from 23 countries. Now, multiple people are dead, others are critically ill, and the vessel is stuck under quarantine off Cape Verde.
At least 3 people have already died from the Andes strain of hantavirus — a particularly dangerous variant capable of limited person-to-person spread in close contact. Several more cases have been confirmed, with passengers who left the ship earlier now carrying the threat across continents.
Alarm in South Africa
A 69-year-old Dutch woman who disembarked at St Helena boarded Airlink flight 4Z132 to Johannesburg on 25 April. She fell severely ill during the flight and died shortly after landing. Tests later confirmed hantavirus.
Now comes the alarming update: the first person who was on that same flight has started showing symptoms after leaving the plane. Authorities are closely monitoring this individual in the Western Cape, along with several others.
Current situation on the ground:
- Over 80 passengers and crew from the flight have been traced.
- At least 10 people under active monitoring in Gauteng.
- Four individuals flagged in the Western Cape.
- Contact tracing rapidly expanding across multiple provinces.
While the Department of Health continues to insist the risk to the general public remains low, the appearance of new symptoms in someone who simply shared a flight is sending shockwaves through the system.
Why this is so frightening
Hantavirus attacks fast. It starts with flu-like symptoms that can quickly progress to severe breathing difficulties and life-threatening lung failure. The Andes strain is especially worrying because it has caused limited human-to-human transmission before.
Common early symptoms include:
- Fever
- Muscle pain
- Headaches
- Fatigue
- Sore throat
There is no vaccine. No miracle cure. Only hospital supportive care — and time is critical.
Is another crisis unfolding?
South Africa’s health teams are working flat out with the NICD and WHO, using lessons from COVID-19. But with passengers already dispersed across the country and symptoms that look like ordinary flu, many are asking: Are we catching this early enough?
Airlink has urged anyone who was on flight 4Z132 and feels unwell to contact the Department of Health immediately.
This story is moving fast. One death on arrival was bad enough — now the first post-flight symptoms are appearing. South Africans are watching anxiously to see whether this remains contained… or whether the cruise ship horror is only just beginning.
What do you think? Is this the start of something bigger, or will quick action stop it in its tracks? Drop your thoughts below.
Stay alert, Mzansi. Updates coming.
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Hein
May 09, 2026 07:39IT IS THE SAME SYMPTOMS OF THE NORMAL COLD/FLU THAT IS PRESENT EVERY WINTER,STOP THE FEAR MONGERING.