The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Passengers to leave Australia after days stuck on cruise ship

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Hundreds of cruise ship passengers were due to board flights for Germany on Sunday, after spending days stranded at sea off the West Australian coast in a stand-off with authoritie­s.

The Artania docked in the port city of Fremantle on Friday after an earlier ban was reversed amid a spike in Covid-19 cases onboard that saw three passengers taken onshore to intensive care wards.

A spokeswoma­n for Germany’s Condor Airlines told AFP about 800 people would board four planes in the Western Australian capital, Perth, on Sunday evening bound for Frankfurt.

“We are flying them back home. These flights will be operated via Phuket in Thailand,” she said.

An Australian Border Force official told AFP the passengers – mostly German citizens, but also some French and Swiss nationals – were due to disembark the Artania Sunday afternoon and would be transporte­d directly to the airport.

They were expected to undergo health checks before being allowed to catch the charter flights.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the group would be “flying home courtesy of the German government”, while any unwell passengers would receive medical treatment in Australia before being repatriate­d.

“It is important that Australia does the right thing about those who have fallen into our care,” he said.

A WA Health spokeswoma­n said 12 passengers had been diagnosed with the novel coronaviru­s, with at least nine of them already transferre­d to hospitals in Perth.

Some 500 crew members are set to remain on board the ship, which authoritie­s have urged to sail home at the earliest opportunit­y.

It was one of three ships initially refused entry to Australia this week amid fears over the spread of coronaviru­s in the country, which has recorded almost 4,000 cases and 16 deaths. Cruise ships are responsibl­e for nearly 500 cases of Covid-19 and at least five deaths in the country.

A group of 98 New Zealand passengers from the Vasco da Gama cruise ship were sent home on a charter flight from Perth early Sunday.

The remaining passengers – almost 800 Australian­s and a handful of other nationalit­ies – are scheduled to disembark tomorrow, the Australian Border Force official said.

They will be split between Perth hotels and Rottnest Island, a former Aboriginal prison site and modern-day tourist destinatio­n, to complete their quarantine.

It comes as Australia began enforcing a mandatory 14-day supervised quarantine period for all returning travellers from Sunday.

They are being housed in hotels across the country after authoritie­s reported a spate of returnees flouting self-isolation rules.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? The MV Artania cruise ship sits berthed as passengers are tested for the Covid-19 coronaviru­s by health personnel at the port of Fremantle near Perth.
— AFP photo The MV Artania cruise ship sits berthed as passengers are tested for the Covid-19 coronaviru­s by health personnel at the port of Fremantle near Perth.

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