Greece is holding a 75-year-old MV Hondius passenger in a negative-pressure hospital chamber -stricter than any other European country's response to the same exposure-
because Health Minister Adonis Georgiadis says a reported outbreak in Greece at the peak of tourist season could become a global headline and devastate the economy.
Speaking to Mega TV, Mr. Georgiadis confirmed the man remains asymptomatic and fever-free but said home isolation, the option chosen by other European nations for their own exposed citizens, was not appropriate for Greece given its tourism dependence.
Mr. Georgiadis used the appearance to push back against online conspiracy theories casting the quarantine as a precursor to new pandemic restrictions.
"Hantavirus is not COVID-19," he said flatly, ruling out any plans for mandatory vaccinations, masks or lockdowns. He described the situation as a contained, specific exposure — not a public health emergency.
The passenger, repatriated Monday from Eindhoven aboard a Greek Air Force aircraft, praised the citizen's cooperation with the quarantine protocols.
The MV Hondius — a Dutch-flagged cruise vessel — recorded at least three deaths from hantavirus before docking in Tenerife.
Health authorities reiterated that the virus spreads through contact with infected rodents and poses minimal risk of human-to-human transmission.