The British military carried out an extraordinary relief operation after a suspected hantavirus case emerged on the remote island of Tristan da Cunha. British paratroopers, medical experts, and medical supplies were airlifted to the island to provide immediate medical assistance to the affected patient.
According to media reports, the British Ministry of Defence stated that six paratroopers and two military medical personnel from the 16 Air Assault Brigade parachuted onto the island from a Royal Air Force A400M aircraft.
The aircraft departed from RAF Brize Norton airbase in Oxfordshire, United Kingdom. It first arrived at Ascension Island and then flew approximately 3,000 kilometers south to reach Tristan da Cunha.
Oxygen cylinders and other medical supplies were also delivered to the island along with the military personnel. During the flight, the A400M aircraft was refueled mid air by an RAF Voyager aircraft.
The British Ministry of Defence stated that this was the first time the British military had deployed medical personnel by parachute for humanitarian medical assistance.
The medical supplies were primarily sent for a British citizen who was a passenger aboard a cruise ship. Reports had emerged regarding the spread of hantavirus on the ship, which had reached Tristan da Cunha between April 13 and April 15. According to the World Health Organization, the individual developed hantavirus like symptoms on April 28, though his condition remains stable and he has been kept in isolation.
The Ministry of Defence said that the island had run critically low on oxygen supplies, making an aerial relief operation the only possible way to deliver timely medical assistance to the patient.
Tristan da Cunha is a small island located between South Africa and South America, with a population of around 200 people. It is considered the world’s most remote inhabited island. Its nearest inhabited neighboring island is Saint Helena, located approximately 2,400 kilometers away, and reaching it by boat takes nearly six days.
There is no airstrip on the island, meaning access is generally only possible by boat. Medical facilities are also limited, and under normal circumstances only a two member medical team is stationed on the island.
Earlier, on May 7, PCR tests were also transported to Ascension Island via military aircraft, where another British citizen from the same cruise ship had been taken off. He was later transferred to South Africa for medical treatment.
Commander of the 16 Air Assault Brigade Brigadier Ed Cartwright said that the arrival of paratroopers, medical personnel, and medical supplies from the sky would certainly have boosted the morale of the island’s residents.
