COVID-19 pandemic
The ship became infamous in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, as the source of over 10% of Australia's early COVID-19 cases.[11] By August, the total number of deaths associated with the ship was 28 and the number of infections was estimated at no fewer than 900.[12] A cluster of cases in New Zealand was also linked to the ship.
On 8 March 2020, Ruby Princess departed Sydney, Australia for a 13-night cruise around New Zealand. Intended ports of call were Fiordland National Park (scenic cruising), Port Chalmers (for Dunedin), Akaroa, Wellington, Napier, Tauranga, Auckland, and Paihia (for the Bay of Islands). The cruise was cut short on 15 March and Ruby Princess returned direct to Sydney from Napier.[13]
Ruby Princess' visit to Napier on 15 March 2020 led to a cluster of 16 COVID-19 cases there.[14][15][16]
On 19 March 2020, the ship arrived back in Sydney, New South Wales two days early from the New Zealand cruise, docking at 3 a.m., as some COVID-19 swabs needed to be tested as an urgent matter.[17] The ship disembarked 2,700 passengers later that morning. The state health minister, Brad Hazzard announced on 20 March 2020 that 13 of the people on the ship had been tested for the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus, and 3 of them were positive. New South Wales health authorities asked all passengers to go into self-isolation.[18] It was announced on 24 March that one passenger had died and 133 on the ship had tested positive for the coronavirus.[19]
As of 30 March, at least 440 passengers had tested positive for the virus: 211 were in New South Wales, 71 in South Australia, 70 in Queensland, 43 in Western Australia, 22 in the Australian Capital Territory, 18 in Victoria, three in Tasmania and two in the Northern Territory.[20] By 31 March, five of them had died, one in the Australian Capital Territory, two in Tasmania, one in New South Wales and one in Queensland.[21] By 2 April, cases in New South Wales had risen to 337 passengers and 3 crew members, and total passenger cases had risen to at least 576,[22] excluding passengers who left Australia without being tested.
On 1 April, the ship was off Port Botany, New South Wales. The International Transport Workers' Federation had called on the Australian government to allow the crew members to be disembarked so that they could be flown to their countries of residence. At that time there were 15,000 crew members in 18 cruise ships sitting off the Australian coast. Six from Ruby Princess had been medically evacuated.[23] Aspen Medical was contracted to carry out medical assessments on the ship and visited it on 2 April.[24]
Another three passengers from the ship were reported dead in New South Wales on 5 April,[25] and a fourth in Queensland. Another died in Western Australia on 6 April[26] followed by one in Tasmania on 7 April,[27] bringing total deaths to 13.[28][26][27] The death toll reached 21 on 18 April 2020 with the death of a second man in the United States.[29] About 900 passengers from countries other than Australia left Sydney after the ships arrival there; few specifics are known about infections or deaths in this group.[30]
There had been 662 confirmed cases of the virus,[33] including 342 in New South Wales. 11 cases of secondary transmission from people infected on the ship had been reported, which had not led to any deaths.[25]
As of 8 April, the ship's crew of about 1,000 remained on board, with 200 exhibiting flu-like symptoms; 18 had tested positive for COVID-19. The vessel moored at Port Kembla on 5 April 2020.[34] 542 crew members were taken off the ship for repatriation to Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, Japan, Ireland, Mexico, New Zealand, the Philippines, the United Kingdom and the United States between 21 and 23 April.[35] 190 members of the crew have tested positive for the virus.[36] The ship left Port Kembla on 23 April.[37] On 7 May, the ship arrived in Manila and disembarked 214 Filipino crew members.[38]
Criminal investigation
On 5 April 2020, New South Wales Police Force launched a criminal investigation into whether the operator of the ship, Carnival Australia, violated the Biosecurity Act 2015 (Cwth) and New South Wales state laws, by deliberately concealing COVID-19 cases.[39] A report by The Guardian's Matilda Boseley commented: "Since the ship's 2,700 passengers were allowed to freely disembark in Sydney on 19 March, federal and state authorities have been pinballing blame."[40]
On 7 April 2020, it was reported that the New Zealand Prime Minister, Jacinda Ardern, had requested Crown Law to check whether her country's laws had been broken.[41]
As of the evening of 8 April, 30 investigators had been assigned to Strike Force Bast, which was looking into the Ruby Princess case: as to "the communications, actions, and other circumstances that led to the docking and disembarking of the vessel" without a quarantine.[42]
Criminal investigation
On 5 April 2020, New South Wales Police Force launched a criminal investigation into whether the operator of the ship, Carnival Australia, violated the Biosecurity Act 2015 (Cwth) and New South Wales state laws, by deliberately concealing COVID-19 cases.[39] A report by The Guardian's Matilda Boseley commented: "Since the ship's 2,700 passengers were allowed to freely disembark in Sydney on 19 March, federal and state authorities have been pinballing blame."[40]
On 7 April 2020, it was reported that the New Zealand Prime Minister, Jacinda Ardern, had requested Crown Law to check whether her country's laws had been broken.[41]
As of the evening of 8 April, 30 investigators had been assigned to Strike Force Bast, which was looking into the Ruby Princess case: as to "the communications, actions, and other circumstances that led to the docking and disembarking of the vessel" without a quarantine.[42] The ship's voyage data recorder