(CMR) A team from the RCIPS Air Operations Unit carried out a mission on Saturday, 14 March 2020 to deliver emergency medical supplies for The MS Braemar cruise ship, which is currently off the Bahamas and unable to dock at present due to an outbreak of COVID-19 onboard.
The medicines, which are not related to COVID-19 treatment, were standard prescription items which were urgently required by passengers and in good supply on Cayman. The operation was coordinated by the Governor’s Office and the British High Commission in Nassau. The supplies were landed in the Bahamas and were delivered to the ship, which is off Grand Bahama, by the British High Commission.
The MS Braemar has over 680 passengers onboard most of whom are British. They include a number of people who are in urgent need of the medicines.
The operation was authorized by Governor Martyn Roper and Premier Alden McLaughlin.
The Governor commented,
“Once again we are extremely grateful to the team at the RCIPS Air Operations Unit for their service. This mission was vital to ensure the passengers on the Braemar had access to life-saving medicines. My thanks also go to the pharmacy team at the HSA for providing such a professional response.”
Premier Alden McLaughlin said,
“This is a time when the world needs to come together to help each other. The RCIPS helicopter has proved vital in saving lives not only in Cayman but also in the region. This operation was essential to provide vital medicines to vulnerable passengers and I am pleased that here in Cayman we have the capability to protect people at home but also to help those in distress on the sea.”
The MS Braemar cruise ship has been scrambling to find any Caribbean country that would take them after it confirmed at least five cases of COVID-19 on board. Twenty passengers and another 20 crew members, including a doctor, are in isolation after displaying influenza-like symptoms while traveling on the ship.
The transatlantic cruise ship has 682 passengers and 381 crew members on board. British officials launched an intense diplomatic effort to find a country willing to take the MS Braemar which belongs to the British company Fred Olsen Cruise Lines.
Cuba has indicated it may be willing to assist. A plan to allow the ship to sail back to the UK was ruled out on practical grounds due to the distance involved and the health of the passengers
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