US cruise line defers voyages for 60 days

AFP
Princess Cruises has seen two of its vessels hit by the virus and quarantined: the Diamond Princess, which docked in Japan, and the Grand Princess, which docked in California.
AFP

United States cruise line Princess Cruises said on Thursday it was suspending voyages worldwide for 60 days in response to the coronavirus pandemic.

“In proactive response to the unpredictable circumstances evolving from the global spread of COVID-19 and in an abundance of caution, Princess Cruises announced that it will voluntarily pause global operations of its 18 cruise ships for two months,” it said in a statement.

Princess, owned by travel colossus Carnival Corp, has seen two of its vessels hit by the virus and quarantined: the Diamond Princess, which docked in Japan, and the Grand Princess, which docked in California.

“Princess Cruises is a global vacation company that serves more than 50,000 guests daily from 70 countries as part of our diverse business, and it is widely known that we have been managing the implications of COVID-19 on two continents,” Jan Swartz, president of Princess Cruises, said.

The move will hit vessels set to sail between March 12 and May 10. People on a cruise that will end within the next five days will continue as normal, while voyages that are ongoing as of March 17 will end early, the statement said.


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