WHO praises Spain's handling of repatriation: 'Further Hantavirus spread can be stopped effectively'
Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.
Oliver Farry is pleased to welcome Muhammad Munir, Virologist and Professor in Virology and Viral Zoonosis at Lancaster University. Munir offers a rare combination of epidemiological precision, operational insight, and public health realism as he assesses the international response to the hantavirus. Speaking at a moment of acute uncertainty, Munir frames the repatriation effort not merely as a logistical exercise, but as what he calls “a crucial juncture and a Rubicon moment”: a threshold at which scientific preparedness, political coordination, and public compliance converge to determine whether an outbreak is contained or allowed to proliferate. Throughout the conversation, Munir moves fluently between molecular virology, outbreak forensics, and environmental epidemiology. He contrasts hantavirus with COVID-19, explains why asymptomatic transmission is not the central concern here, and repeatedly shifts attention toward what he sees as the true challenge: the deceptively long incubation period and the possibility of human error during quarantine.