
Hundreds of passengers – mostly British and Irish – on a cruise ship have been quarantined in the French port of Bordeaux after a death on board.
French health authorities have announced a quarantine for passengers on a cruise ship after it docked in Bordeaux following the death of one of the passengers who is believed to have have a gastro-intestinal illness.
Dozens also suffered from upset stomachs aboard the Ambition – most of whose 1,233 passengers are from Britain or Ireland – which arrived in the western port of Bordeaux on Tuesday, with 514 Indian crew members also on board.
But health officials said there was no connection with the hantavirus outbreak, suspected of killing three passengers on the Dutch MV Hondius cruise ship that set sail from Argentina.
One 90-year-old passenger on the Ambition, run by the Ambassador Cruise Line company, had died and about 50 people have shown symptoms of stomach issues, the officials said.
Initial tests ruled out an outbreak of norovirus, a highly contagious form of gastroenteritis which causes vomiting and diarrhoea, but secondary tests were still underway, they added.
Food poisoning had not been excluded.
Passengers on board the Ambition showed peak symptoms on Monday when the ship was docked in Brest, the officials said. The 90-year-old died before they arrived at the port in France’s northwestern Brittany region.
The ship, which left the Shetland Islands north of Scotland on May 6th, stopped in Belfast in Northern Ireland and Liverpool in England before reaching Bordeaux, from where it was scheduled to depart for Spain.
No security measures were in place around the ship as it was docked in Bordeaux on Wednesday, an AFP reporter said. Passengers were taking pictures of the French city from the deck.
Separately, France has announced compulsory hospital quarantine for any contact cases linked to the Hondius outbreak of hantavirus.

