Cambodia's Prime Minister has defended allowing a ship to dock despite confirmed coronavirus case

Passengers of a cruise ship where one woman was confirmed to have the coronavirus have now travelled onwards to a number of countries.

Passengers disembark from the Westerdam cruise ship at the port of Sihanoukville in Cambodia.

Passengers disembark from the Westerdam cruise ship at the port of Sihanoukville in Cambodia. Source: Kydpl Kyodo

Cambodia's leader has defended his decision to allow a US cruise ship to dock despite at least one passenger later being diagnosed with the deadly coronavirus, while authorities scrambled to track down hundreds that came in contact with her. 

The Westerdam was turned away by several Asian ports before Cambodia agreed last week to allow its more than .

But jubilation dimmed over the weekend when an  that originated from in the central Chinese Hubei province and has now killed more than 1,800 people.
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen greets a passenger of the Westerdam cruise ship.
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen greets a passenger of the Westerdam cruise ship. Source: AP
By the time she was diagnosed, scores of fellow passengers had moved through different countries - including Singapore and Thailand. Four are currently being monitored in Bangkok. 

But Prime Minister Hun Sen remained defiant.

"Some people say it brings the virus to Cambodia, but Cambodia has not had the disease [among its people]," he said in a speech. 

Cruise operator Holland America said tests for 406 passengers now at a Phnom Penh hotel were negative, and they could continue their journeys home. 

For those who've made it to the US, local health departments - working with the US Centers for Disease Control - are following up with passengers who might have had contact with the infected passenger, it added.
Three hundred passengers in Phnom Penh would fly to Dubai, Hun Sen said, while 100 others would take a chartered flight to Japan.

Authorities are also arranging another flight for passengers remaining in Sihanoukville - the southern coast where the Westerdam is docked - though Hun Sen did not say where that was headed.

As countries in the region scrambled to restrict access to Westerdam's passengers, those in Phnom Penh were taken on a tour of the capital under the glare of state-aligned media.
Almost a thousand people remain onboard the Westerdam, barred from leaving until they have been tested.  

Cambodia only has one confirmed case of the virus - a Chinese tourist who has since recovered.

The country, a staunch ally of Beijing, received billions of dollars in soft loans and investment from China, and Hun Sen travelled there earlier this month in a show of solidarity. 


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3 min read
Published 19 February 2020 7:52am
By Maani Truu


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