Crew leaves virus-hit ship for new quarantine on shore in Japan

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

Workers in protective gear prepare to check passengers after they disembark from the Diamond Princess cruise ship, which has been quarantined, at the Daikoku Pier Cruise Terminal in Yokohama, Japan, on Feb 21, 2020.

PHOTO: EPA-EFE

Follow topic:
TOKYO (AFP) - Crew members from a coronavirus-stricken cruise ship off Japan began leaving the vessel on Thursday (Feb 27) for a new quarantine on shore after passengers left the boat, the government said.
"Today, 240 crew members are leaving the ship and this disembarking operation will continue for a couple of days," a health ministry official told AFP.
Those leaving the boat will be placed under medical observation for 14 days at government-designated dormitories before being allowed to leave Japan, they said.
Hundreds of crew members of the Diamond Princess remained on the vessel to continue operations while Japanese officials placed thousands of passengers under quarantine after the ship arrived at a port near Tokyo on Feb 3.
But the quarantine has been heavily criticised after more than 700 people on board tested positive for the virus.
Hundreds of passengers who tested negative were allowed to depart the vessel after the 14-day quarantine on board, but several have since been diagnosed with the virus.
The health ministry has also admitted that it allowed some travellers to go home without testing them during the quarantine period.
The ship carried about 3,700 passengers and crew members when it reached the port of Yokohama.
Several nations, including the United States, Australia and the Philippines, have used chartered flights to repatriate hundreds of their citizens.
Passengers and crew members who tested positive for the virus have been sent to hospitals in Japan.
Four people who were hospitalised after being taken off the ship have died.
Several government officials working on the ship have themselves contracted the infection, but the authorities have defended a policy of not uniformly testing those working on the vessel, arguing that medical experts have the skills to avoid infections.
Crew who show no symptoms will stay at National Tax College dormitories in Saitama, near Tokyo, for observation.
Japan's government used the dorms to conduct a 14-day quarantine of some Japanese nationals who evacuated from Wuhan and its surrounding areas, the epicentre of the outbreak.
Aside from the cruise ship, Japan has seen at least 186 cases of infection among the general population.
Three deaths related to the virus have been recorded.
See more on