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RAF A400M drops paratroopers on remote island after Hantavirus alert 

The Royal Air Force (RAF) has conducted a long-range parachute drop over the island of Tristan da Cunha, an isolated British Overseas Territory in the middle of the South Atlantic Ocean. 

On May 9, 2026, a RAF A400M aircraft dropped six paratroopers and two military medics from the 16 Air Assault Brigade of the Parachute Regiment, on the remote British outpost in order to provide medical assistance to a suspected Hantavirus patient. 

Since Tristan da Cunha does not have an airport (the rugged volcanic island has almost no flat terrain), the parachute drop was the fastest way to deliver the required medical aid. If delivered by ship, the medical supplies would have taken days to arrive. 

With a population of around 220 people, pretty much all of them clustered around the island’s only settlement, Edinburgh of the Seven Seas, Tristan da Cunha is the most remote of all British Overseas Territories, when the distance to the closest landmass is taken into consideration (the tiny British territory of Pitcairn, a remote island in the South Pacific is a strong contender by some metrics). 

Communications between the island and the rest of the world are usually assured by a regular boat service which calls at the island roughly every four to five weeks, as well as occasional visits by passing ships.

This was the case of MV Hondius, the cruise ship in which a deadly Hantavirus outbreak was detected in April 2026. At least three of the ship’s passengers have died as a result of being infected, including a Dutch woman who disembarked in Saint Helena and later traveled to South Africa, triggering fears of more widespread contagion.

Several islanders were reportedly onboard the ship, which called at Tristan da Cunha before heading for Saint Helena, another British island some 2,400 km (1,500 miles) further north. One of these people has since been kept under observation due to fears he may have caught the infectious disease.

The launch of the parachute mission was triggered by the fact that oxygen reserves were running low on the island, which would have made it extremely difficult to provide medical care in case a Hantavirus infection was confirmed.

According to the British government, this is the first time the UK has resorted to a parachute jump to deploy medical personnel on an ad-hoc humanitarian mission. The multi-stage mission first involved the deployment of the military team and the A400M aircraft from RAF Brize Norton, in Oxfordshire, to Ascension Island. The second stage involved a 6,000 km (3,700-mile approximately) round trip from Ascension Island to Tristan da Cunha and back.

Ascension Island is another British mid-ocean outpost which played a key role as a supply base for long range air RAF missions in 1982 during the Falklands War. 

During its flight to Tristan da Cunha, the A400M was supported by an A330 MRTT Voyager tanker for air to air refueling. 

Interestingly, this is a type of mission that the RAF has been training for as recently as April 2025. Back then, an A400M from RAF Brize Norton forward-deployed to RAF Mount Pleasant, in the Falkland Islands, to practice parachute drops at designated remote locations on the South Atlantic archipelago.

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