NEWS STORY : UK Military Parachutes Medical Team Onto Tristan da Cunha After Suspected Hantavirus Case

STORY

The UK military has carried out an emergency parachute drop onto Tristan da Cunha to deliver medical personnel, oxygen supplies and equipment after a British national on the island was suspected of contracting Hantavirus.

The Ministry of Defence said six paratroopers and two military clinicians from 16 Air Assault Brigade jumped from an RAF A400M transport aircraft onto the remote South Atlantic island. Oxygen supplies and other medical aid were dropped almost simultaneously. It is the first time the UK military has inserted medical personnel by parachute to provide humanitarian support.

Tristan da Cunha is Britain’s most remote inhabited overseas territory, has no airstrip and is normally accessible only by boat. The island has a population of 221 people. The Government said oxygen supplies on the island had reached a critical level, leaving an airdrop with medical staff as the only way to get urgent care to the patient in time.

The operation involved a flight of 6,788km from RAF Brize Norton to Ascension Island, followed by a further journey of more than 3,000km to Tristan da Cunha. The A400M was supported by an RAF Voyager aircraft, which provided mid-air refuelling. Weather conditions around the island are often difficult, with average wind speeds frequently exceeding 25mph.

Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper said the mission reflected the Government’s commitment to people in the Overseas Territories and to British nationals wherever they are. Armed Forces Minister Al Carns described it as an “extraordinary operation” in challenging circumstances and paid tribute to the personnel involved.

The mission follows the UK Government’s wider response to a Hantavirus outbreak linked to the MV Hondius cruise ship. British nationals are being repatriated from the vessel to the UK on a special chartered flight. The Government said none of those returning had reported symptoms, but all British passengers and crew on board are being isolated for 45 days and monitored by the UK Health Security Agency.