BOGOTA, Colombia, May 8 — Argentina is facing its most severe hantavirus season in recent years, a crisis now entangled in a diplomatic dispute, Anadolu Ajansi (AA) reported.
As health authorities struggle to contain a surge that has seen cases nearly double compared with last year, the government is accusing the World Health Organisation (WHO) of allegedly “politicising” the outbreak.
According to the latest epidemiological bulletin released on Monday, during the 2025–2026 season, which began last June, Argentina has recorded 101 confirmed cases — up from 57 cases reported during the same period last year.
“Nationwide, the 2025–2026 season shows a number of cases that have been above the outbreak threshold for most of the period analysed,” the Ministry of Health reported, noting a “sustained increase” with no signs of slowing.
So far in the 2026 calendar year alone, 42 cases have been documented as authorities scramble to implement early detection protocols.
Experts point to a series of environmental factors — including droughts followed by heavy rainfall — as the primary driver of the surge.
While dry periods force rodents into human habitats in search of food, heavy rains trigger seed dispersal, leading to population growth.
The Ministry of Health also attributed the rise to “increasing human interaction with wild environments”, citing habitat destruction, rural residential expansion and shifting endemic areas linked to climate change.
The biological crisis has sparked a geopolitical row following an outbreak on the MV Hondius, a luxury cruise ship that departed from the Argentine port of Ushuaia.
In March 2026, Argentina followed the United States in formally withdrawing from the WHO.
Yesterday, the Argentine Ministry of Health accused the organisation of “exploiting” the cruise ship infections to “influence a sovereign decision”.
Despite the political friction, health officials said “preventive epidemiological monitoring” remains active. However, authorities have yet to determine the exact source of the infection aboard the MV Hondius.













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