One of the first cruise ships to ply through Caribbean waters since the pandemic began ended its trip early after at least five passengers tested positive for Covid-19, officials have confirmed. The <em>SeaDream I</em> is carrying 66 crew and more than 50 passengers, with the majority of passengers hailing from the US, according to Sue Bryant, who is aboard the ship and is a cruise editor for <em>The Times</em> and <em>The Sunday Times</em> in the UK. She said one passenger became sick on Wednesday, November 11 and forced the ship to turn back to Barbados, where it had departed from on Saturday, November 7. However, the ship had yet to dock in Barbados as local authorities tested those on board. The captain announced that at least five passengers have tested positive, Bryant said. The incident marked the first time <em>SeaDream</em> had resumed its West Indies voyages since the pandemic, with the ship originally scheduled to return to Barbados on Saturday, according to an online itinerary. The ship had made several stops in St Vincent and the Grenadines before turning back. The Norway-headquartered SeaDream Yacht Club, the ship’s parent company, wouldn’t say how many passengers tested positive in the initial round of testing. Bryant said passengers were required to have a negative PCR test to enter Barbados and underwent another test on the dock administered by the ship’s doctor. “We all felt very safe,” she said, adding that the ship had been implementing strict hygiene protocols. “Yet somehow, Covid appears to have got on board.” On Thursday, November 12, SeaDream said the ship’s medical staff had tested all crew members and all tested negative. The company also said it is currently retesting all guests, noting they're all under quarantine along with non-essential crew members. “We are working closely with local health and government authorities to resolve this situation in the best possible way,” SeaDream said. "Our main priority is the health and safety of our crew, guests and the communities we visit.” Government officials in Barbados did not return messages for comment. Waters around the Caribbean have been largely bereft of cruise ships this year, with the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention suspending cruise ship operations at US ports in mid-March. The no-sail order expired on October 31. Last week, the Cruise Lines International Association, which represents 95 per cent of global ocean-growing cruise capacity, said its members were voluntarily suspending cruise operations in the US until Thursday, December 31. SeaDream was among the first cruise lines to resume service in Europe. In August, the company reported that an asymptomatic passenger had tested positive for the coronavirus after disembarking from <em>SeaDream I</em> in Denmark. All other passengers and crew tested negative, the company said.