Coronavirus: Two passengers die after leaving Japanese cruise ship

First deaths from virus-striken boat were Japanese and in their 80s

Passengers  seen on  deck of the quarantined Diamond Princess cruise ship, docked at the Daikoku Pier. Photograph: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Getty
Passengers seen on deck of the quarantined Diamond Princess cruise ship, docked at the Daikoku Pier. Photograph: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Getty

Two elderly passengers taken off the Diamond Princess cruise ship because they were infected with coronavirus have died, Japan's Health Ministry said.

They are the first fatalities from the virus-stricken boat, and Japan now has three deaths linked to the Covid-19 illness.

Japan’s NHK public television said both were Japanese and in their 80s. A health ministry official only confirmed that they had been previously taken to hospital in serious condition and had existing chronic diseases.

Two Irish citizens who were on board the quarantined Diamond Princess cruise ship have tested positive for the coronavirus.

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The couple are being cared for at a military hospital in Tokyo having been transferred from the ship to the hospital on February 16th.

They were among six Irish citizens on board the ship.

The new virus began in China late last year and has affected tens of thousands of people, mostly in central China's Hubei province.

The 621 cases confirmed among the Diamond Princess’s original 3,711 people on board are the most anywhere outside China. Japan has more than 700 confirmed cases, including the country’s first death unrelated to the ship.

The Diamond Princess, docked in Yokohama near Tokyo, started letting passengers who tested negative for the virus off the ship on Wednesday, when the government-set 14-day quarantine ended.

On Thursday, hundreds of other passengers were also expected to leave in a massive disembarkation process expected to last until Friday. Test results are still pending for some people on board.

Quarantine process

Japan’s government has been questioned over its decision to keep people on the ship, which some experts have called a perfect virus incubator. Some medical experts who observed the quarantine process on board also raised caution over lax protective measures on the ship.

Kentaro Iwata, an infectious diseases expert at Kobe University Hospital who boarded the ship as part of a medical relief team earlier this week, said in a YouTube video that he was alarmed by the lack of control measures, including distinction between clean and contaminated zones, and the inadequate use of protective gear.

He called it “chaotic” and said it made him scared of getting infected himself.

Mr Iwata, currently in self-imposed quarantine at a hotel, said the Japanese Health Ministry-led operation implemented some measures, but “to me it was not good enough, because there were exchanges of dirty and clean”.

He said Japan should follow the example of the US and other countries requiring an additional two-week quarantine for passengers brought home from the ship.

Health minister Katsunobu Kato initially said those with negative virus tests had fulfilled the Japanese quarantine requirement and were free to walk out and go home on public transport, but later urged former passengers to avoid non-essential outings and try to stay home for about two weeks.

About 440 passengers had left the ship by Wednesday evening, and Japanese officials said more than 1,000 others will be gone by Friday.

The Diamond Princess was quarantined after one passenger who left the ship earlier in Hong Kong was found to have the virus.

Crew members, who could not be confined to their rooms because they were working and causing secondary infections, are expected to stay on the ship.– AP