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  • EXCLUSIVE: FULL COPY ON REQUEST: Sir Richard Branson’s new cruise ship Scarlet Lady sits forlornly at dock in Miami along with four other giant liners yesterday (Sunday) as the usually heaving terminals resembled ghost towns because of the coronavirus crisis. Miami is the world’s busiest cruise port with 5.5million passengers a year. But yesterday at 4pm – when ships traditionally sail amid fanfare and horns blasting their farewell – there was an eerie silence. The Florida cruise port is usually bustling with excited passengers, truck and van deliveries of food and drink, rammed parking lots and packed lines of taxis in a cacophony of noise and mayhem. Yet yesterday there was hardly a soul about. The parking garages were virtually empty, the usually crammed individual terminals were lifeless and the roads were deserted. Apart from a handful of departing passengers only a few dejected port workers, who are about to be laid off, were milling around. One of the ships at dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) is at the center of controversy after it was revealed it had a passenger who tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. The passenger disembarked from MSC Meraviglia (correct) on March 8 after an eight-day Caribbean cruise. After the passenger got off, 103 others plus the vessels crew were left on board for the next voyage. Four days later, after the ship had sailed with thousands more people, the cruise line was told by Canadian authorities that the passenger had tested positive. Seven crew were isolated as a result. But instead of holding the ship off the Florida coast and testing everyone on board for COVID-19, MSC said US health authorities cleared the ship to dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) and for the 3,877 passengers to disembark as normal. As a result, thousands of people got off the ship without undergoing medical screening. 15 Mar 2020 Pictured: Cruise Ships. Photo credit: Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA630678_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: FULL COPY ON REQUEST: Sir Richard Branson’s new cruise ship Scarlet Lady sits forlornly at dock in Miami along with four other giant liners yesterday (Sunday) as the usually heaving terminals resembled ghost towns because of the coronavirus crisis. Miami is the world’s busiest cruise port with 5.5million passengers a year. But yesterday at 4pm – when ships traditionally sail amid fanfare and horns blasting their farewell – there was an eerie silence. The Florida cruise port is usually bustling with excited passengers, truck and van deliveries of food and drink, rammed parking lots and packed lines of taxis in a cacophony of noise and mayhem. Yet yesterday there was hardly a soul about. The parking garages were virtually empty, the usually crammed individual terminals were lifeless and the roads were deserted. Apart from a handful of departing passengers only a few dejected port workers, who are about to be laid off, were milling around. One of the ships at dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) is at the center of controversy after it was revealed it had a passenger who tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. The passenger disembarked from MSC Meraviglia (correct) on March 8 after an eight-day Caribbean cruise. After the passenger got off, 103 others plus the vessels crew were left on board for the next voyage. Four days later, after the ship had sailed with thousands more people, the cruise line was told by Canadian authorities that the passenger had tested positive. Seven crew were isolated as a result. But instead of holding the ship off the Florida coast and testing everyone on board for COVID-19, MSC said US health authorities cleared the ship to dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) and for the 3,877 passengers to disembark as normal. As a result, thousands of people got off the ship without undergoing medical screening. 15 Mar 2020 Pictured: Cruise Ships. Photo credit: Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA630678_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: FULL COPY ON REQUEST: Sir Richard Branson’s new cruise ship Scarlet Lady sits forlornly at dock in Miami along with four other giant liners yesterday (Sunday) as the usually heaving terminals resembled ghost towns because of the coronavirus crisis. Miami is the world’s busiest cruise port with 5.5million passengers a year. But yesterday at 4pm – when ships traditionally sail amid fanfare and horns blasting their farewell – there was an eerie silence. The Florida cruise port is usually bustling with excited passengers, truck and van deliveries of food and drink, rammed parking lots and packed lines of taxis in a cacophony of noise and mayhem. Yet yesterday there was hardly a soul about. The parking garages were virtually empty, the usually crammed individual terminals were lifeless and the roads were deserted. Apart from a handful of departing passengers only a few dejected port workers, who are about to be laid off, were milling around. One of the ships at dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) is at the center of controversy after it was revealed it had a passenger who tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. The passenger disembarked from MSC Meraviglia (correct) on March 8 after an eight-day Caribbean cruise. After the passenger got off, 103 others plus the vessels crew were left on board for the next voyage. Four days later, after the ship had sailed with thousands more people, the cruise line was told by Canadian authorities that the passenger had tested positive. Seven crew were isolated as a result. But instead of holding the ship off the Florida coast and testing everyone on board for COVID-19, MSC said US health authorities cleared the ship to dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) and for the 3,877 passengers to disembark as normal. As a result, thousands of people got off the ship without undergoing medical screening. 15 Mar 2020 Pictured: Cruise Ships. Photo credit: Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA630678_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: FULL COPY ON REQUEST: Sir Richard Branson’s new cruise ship Scarlet Lady sits forlornly at dock in Miami along with four other giant liners yesterday (Sunday) as the usually heaving terminals resembled ghost towns because of the coronavirus crisis. Miami is the world’s busiest cruise port with 5.5million passengers a year. But yesterday at 4pm – when ships traditionally sail amid fanfare and horns blasting their farewell – there was an eerie silence. The Florida cruise port is usually bustling with excited passengers, truck and van deliveries of food and drink, rammed parking lots and packed lines of taxis in a cacophony of noise and mayhem. Yet yesterday there was hardly a soul about. The parking garages were virtually empty, the usually crammed individual terminals were lifeless and the roads were deserted. Apart from a handful of departing passengers only a few dejected port workers, who are about to be laid off, were milling around. One of the ships at dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) is at the center of controversy after it was revealed it had a passenger who tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. The passenger disembarked from MSC Meraviglia (correct) on March 8 after an eight-day Caribbean cruise. After the passenger got off, 103 others plus the vessels crew were left on board for the next voyage. Four days later, after the ship had sailed with thousands more people, the cruise line was told by Canadian authorities that the passenger had tested positive. Seven crew were isolated as a result. But instead of holding the ship off the Florida coast and testing everyone on board for COVID-19, MSC said US health authorities cleared the ship to dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) and for the 3,877 passengers to disembark as normal. As a result, thousands of people got off the ship without undergoing medical screening. 15 Mar 2020 Pictured: Cruise Ships. Photo credit: Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA630678_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: FULL COPY ON REQUEST: Sir Richard Branson’s new cruise ship Scarlet Lady sits forlornly at dock in Miami along with four other giant liners yesterday (Sunday) as the usually heaving terminals resembled ghost towns because of the coronavirus crisis. Miami is the world’s busiest cruise port with 5.5million passengers a year. But yesterday at 4pm – when ships traditionally sail amid fanfare and horns blasting their farewell – there was an eerie silence. The Florida cruise port is usually bustling with excited passengers, truck and van deliveries of food and drink, rammed parking lots and packed lines of taxis in a cacophony of noise and mayhem. Yet yesterday there was hardly a soul about. The parking garages were virtually empty, the usually crammed individual terminals were lifeless and the roads were deserted. Apart from a handful of departing passengers only a few dejected port workers, who are about to be laid off, were milling around. One of the ships at dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) is at the center of controversy after it was revealed it had a passenger who tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. The passenger disembarked from MSC Meraviglia (correct) on March 8 after an eight-day Caribbean cruise. After the passenger got off, 103 others plus the vessels crew were left on board for the next voyage. Four days later, after the ship had sailed with thousands more people, the cruise line was told by Canadian authorities that the passenger had tested positive. Seven crew were isolated as a result. But instead of holding the ship off the Florida coast and testing everyone on board for COVID-19, MSC said US health authorities cleared the ship to dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) and for the 3,877 passengers to disembark as normal. As a result, thousands of people got off the ship without undergoing medical screening. 15 Mar 2020 Pictured: Cruise Ships. Photo credit: Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA630678_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: FULL COPY ON REQUEST: Sir Richard Branson’s new cruise ship Scarlet Lady sits forlornly at dock in Miami along with four other giant liners yesterday (Sunday) as the usually heaving terminals resembled ghost towns because of the coronavirus crisis. Miami is the world’s busiest cruise port with 5.5million passengers a year. But yesterday at 4pm – when ships traditionally sail amid fanfare and horns blasting their farewell – there was an eerie silence. The Florida cruise port is usually bustling with excited passengers, truck and van deliveries of food and drink, rammed parking lots and packed lines of taxis in a cacophony of noise and mayhem. Yet yesterday there was hardly a soul about. The parking garages were virtually empty, the usually crammed individual terminals were lifeless and the roads were deserted. Apart from a handful of departing passengers only a few dejected port workers, who are about to be laid off, were milling around. One of the ships at dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) is at the center of controversy after it was revealed it had a passenger who tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. The passenger disembarked from MSC Meraviglia (correct) on March 8 after an eight-day Caribbean cruise. After the passenger got off, 103 others plus the vessels crew were left on board for the next voyage. Four days later, after the ship had sailed with thousands more people, the cruise line was told by Canadian authorities that the passenger had tested positive. Seven crew were isolated as a result. But instead of holding the ship off the Florida coast and testing everyone on board for COVID-19, MSC said US health authorities cleared the ship to dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) and for the 3,877 passengers to disembark as normal. As a result, thousands of people got off the ship without undergoing medical screening. 15 Mar 2020 Pictured: Cruise Ships. Photo credit: Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA630678_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: FULL COPY ON REQUEST: Sir Richard Branson’s new cruise ship Scarlet Lady sits forlornly at dock in Miami along with four other giant liners yesterday (Sunday) as the usually heaving terminals resembled ghost towns because of the coronavirus crisis. Miami is the world’s busiest cruise port with 5.5million passengers a year. But yesterday at 4pm – when ships traditionally sail amid fanfare and horns blasting their farewell – there was an eerie silence. The Florida cruise port is usually bustling with excited passengers, truck and van deliveries of food and drink, rammed parking lots and packed lines of taxis in a cacophony of noise and mayhem. Yet yesterday there was hardly a soul about. The parking garages were virtually empty, the usually crammed individual terminals were lifeless and the roads were deserted. Apart from a handful of departing passengers only a few dejected port workers, who are about to be laid off, were milling around. One of the ships at dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) is at the center of controversy after it was revealed it had a passenger who tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. The passenger disembarked from MSC Meraviglia (correct) on March 8 after an eight-day Caribbean cruise. After the passenger got off, 103 others plus the vessels crew were left on board for the next voyage. Four days later, after the ship had sailed with thousands more people, the cruise line was told by Canadian authorities that the passenger had tested positive. Seven crew were isolated as a result. But instead of holding the ship off the Florida coast and testing everyone on board for COVID-19, MSC said US health authorities cleared the ship to dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) and for the 3,877 passengers to disembark as normal. As a result, thousands of people got off the ship without undergoing medical screening. 15 Mar 2020 Pictured: Cruise Ships. Photo credit: Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA630678_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: FULL COPY ON REQUEST: Sir Richard Branson’s new cruise ship Scarlet Lady sits forlornly at dock in Miami along with four other giant liners yesterday (Sunday) as the usually heaving terminals resembled ghost towns because of the coronavirus crisis. Miami is the world’s busiest cruise port with 5.5million passengers a year. But yesterday at 4pm – when ships traditionally sail amid fanfare and horns blasting their farewell – there was an eerie silence. The Florida cruise port is usually bustling with excited passengers, truck and van deliveries of food and drink, rammed parking lots and packed lines of taxis in a cacophony of noise and mayhem. Yet yesterday there was hardly a soul about. The parking garages were virtually empty, the usually crammed individual terminals were lifeless and the roads were deserted. Apart from a handful of departing passengers only a few dejected port workers, who are about to be laid off, were milling around. One of the ships at dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) is at the center of controversy after it was revealed it had a passenger who tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. The passenger disembarked from MSC Meraviglia (correct) on March 8 after an eight-day Caribbean cruise. After the passenger got off, 103 others plus the vessels crew were left on board for the next voyage. Four days later, after the ship had sailed with thousands more people, the cruise line was told by Canadian authorities that the passenger had tested positive. Seven crew were isolated as a result. But instead of holding the ship off the Florida coast and testing everyone on board for COVID-19, MSC said US health authorities cleared the ship to dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) and for the 3,877 passengers to disembark as normal. As a result, thousands of people got off the ship without undergoing medical screening. 15 Mar 2020 Pictured: Cruise Ships. Photo credit: Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA630678_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: FULL COPY ON REQUEST: Sir Richard Branson’s new cruise ship Scarlet Lady sits forlornly at dock in Miami along with four other giant liners yesterday (Sunday) as the usually heaving terminals resembled ghost towns because of the coronavirus crisis. Miami is the world’s busiest cruise port with 5.5million passengers a year. But yesterday at 4pm – when ships traditionally sail amid fanfare and horns blasting their farewell – there was an eerie silence. The Florida cruise port is usually bustling with excited passengers, truck and van deliveries of food and drink, rammed parking lots and packed lines of taxis in a cacophony of noise and mayhem. Yet yesterday there was hardly a soul about. The parking garages were virtually empty, the usually crammed individual terminals were lifeless and the roads were deserted. Apart from a handful of departing passengers only a few dejected port workers, who are about to be laid off, were milling around. One of the ships at dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) is at the center of controversy after it was revealed it had a passenger who tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. The passenger disembarked from MSC Meraviglia (correct) on March 8 after an eight-day Caribbean cruise. After the passenger got off, 103 others plus the vessels crew were left on board for the next voyage. Four days later, after the ship had sailed with thousands more people, the cruise line was told by Canadian authorities that the passenger had tested positive. Seven crew were isolated as a result. But instead of holding the ship off the Florida coast and testing everyone on board for COVID-19, MSC said US health authorities cleared the ship to dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) and for the 3,877 passengers to disembark as normal. As a result, thousands of people got off the ship without undergoing medical screening. 15 Mar 2020 Pictured: Cruise Ships. Photo credit: Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA630678_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: FULL COPY ON REQUEST: Sir Richard Branson’s new cruise ship Scarlet Lady sits forlornly at dock in Miami along with four other giant liners yesterday (Sunday) as the usually heaving terminals resembled ghost towns because of the coronavirus crisis. Miami is the world’s busiest cruise port with 5.5million passengers a year. But yesterday at 4pm – when ships traditionally sail amid fanfare and horns blasting their farewell – there was an eerie silence. The Florida cruise port is usually bustling with excited passengers, truck and van deliveries of food and drink, rammed parking lots and packed lines of taxis in a cacophony of noise and mayhem. Yet yesterday there was hardly a soul about. The parking garages were virtually empty, the usually crammed individual terminals were lifeless and the roads were deserted. Apart from a handful of departing passengers only a few dejected port workers, who are about to be laid off, were milling around. One of the ships at dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) is at the center of controversy after it was revealed it had a passenger who tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. The passenger disembarked from MSC Meraviglia (correct) on March 8 after an eight-day Caribbean cruise. After the passenger got off, 103 others plus the vessels crew were left on board for the next voyage. Four days later, after the ship had sailed with thousands more people, the cruise line was told by Canadian authorities that the passenger had tested positive. Seven crew were isolated as a result. But instead of holding the ship off the Florida coast and testing everyone on board for COVID-19, MSC said US health authorities cleared the ship to dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) and for the 3,877 passengers to disembark as normal. As a result, thousands of people got off the ship without undergoing medical screening. 15 Mar 2020 Pictured: Cruise Ships. Photo credit: Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA630678_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: FULL COPY ON REQUEST: Sir Richard Branson’s new cruise ship Scarlet Lady sits forlornly at dock in Miami along with four other giant liners yesterday (Sunday) as the usually heaving terminals resembled ghost towns because of the coronavirus crisis. Miami is the world’s busiest cruise port with 5.5million passengers a year. But yesterday at 4pm – when ships traditionally sail amid fanfare and horns blasting their farewell – there was an eerie silence. The Florida cruise port is usually bustling with excited passengers, truck and van deliveries of food and drink, rammed parking lots and packed lines of taxis in a cacophony of noise and mayhem. Yet yesterday there was hardly a soul about. The parking garages were virtually empty, the usually crammed individual terminals were lifeless and the roads were deserted. Apart from a handful of departing passengers only a few dejected port workers, who are about to be laid off, were milling around. One of the ships at dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) is at the center of controversy after it was revealed it had a passenger who tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. The passenger disembarked from MSC Meraviglia (correct) on March 8 after an eight-day Caribbean cruise. After the passenger got off, 103 others plus the vessels crew were left on board for the next voyage. Four days later, after the ship had sailed with thousands more people, the cruise line was told by Canadian authorities that the passenger had tested positive. Seven crew were isolated as a result. But instead of holding the ship off the Florida coast and testing everyone on board for COVID-19, MSC said US health authorities cleared the ship to dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) and for the 3,877 passengers to disembark as normal. As a result, thousands of people got off the ship without undergoing medical screening. 15 Mar 2020 Pictured: Cruise Ships. Photo credit: Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA630678_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: FULL COPY ON REQUEST: Sir Richard Branson’s new cruise ship Scarlet Lady sits forlornly at dock in Miami along with four other giant liners yesterday (Sunday) as the usually heaving terminals resembled ghost towns because of the coronavirus crisis. Miami is the world’s busiest cruise port with 5.5million passengers a year. But yesterday at 4pm – when ships traditionally sail amid fanfare and horns blasting their farewell – there was an eerie silence. The Florida cruise port is usually bustling with excited passengers, truck and van deliveries of food and drink, rammed parking lots and packed lines of taxis in a cacophony of noise and mayhem. Yet yesterday there was hardly a soul about. The parking garages were virtually empty, the usually crammed individual terminals were lifeless and the roads were deserted. Apart from a handful of departing passengers only a few dejected port workers, who are about to be laid off, were milling around. One of the ships at dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) is at the center of controversy after it was revealed it had a passenger who tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. The passenger disembarked from MSC Meraviglia (correct) on March 8 after an eight-day Caribbean cruise. After the passenger got off, 103 others plus the vessels crew were left on board for the next voyage. Four days later, after the ship had sailed with thousands more people, the cruise line was told by Canadian authorities that the passenger had tested positive. Seven crew were isolated as a result. But instead of holding the ship off the Florida coast and testing everyone on board for COVID-19, MSC said US health authorities cleared the ship to dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) and for the 3,877 passengers to disembark as normal. As a result, thousands of people got off the ship without undergoing medical screening. 15 Mar 2020 Pictured: Cruise Ships. Photo credit: Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA630678_018.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: FULL COPY ON REQUEST: Sir Richard Branson’s new cruise ship Scarlet Lady sits forlornly at dock in Miami along with four other giant liners yesterday (Sunday) as the usually heaving terminals resembled ghost towns because of the coronavirus crisis. Miami is the world’s busiest cruise port with 5.5million passengers a year. But yesterday at 4pm – when ships traditionally sail amid fanfare and horns blasting their farewell – there was an eerie silence. The Florida cruise port is usually bustling with excited passengers, truck and van deliveries of food and drink, rammed parking lots and packed lines of taxis in a cacophony of noise and mayhem. Yet yesterday there was hardly a soul about. The parking garages were virtually empty, the usually crammed individual terminals were lifeless and the roads were deserted. Apart from a handful of departing passengers only a few dejected port workers, who are about to be laid off, were milling around. One of the ships at dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) is at the center of controversy after it was revealed it had a passenger who tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. The passenger disembarked from MSC Meraviglia (correct) on March 8 after an eight-day Caribbean cruise. After the passenger got off, 103 others plus the vessels crew were left on board for the next voyage. Four days later, after the ship had sailed with thousands more people, the cruise line was told by Canadian authorities that the passenger had tested positive. Seven crew were isolated as a result. But instead of holding the ship off the Florida coast and testing everyone on board for COVID-19, MSC said US health authorities cleared the ship to dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) and for the 3,877 passengers to disembark as normal. As a result, thousands of people got off the ship without undergoing medical screening. 15 Mar 2020 Pictured: Cruise Ships. Photo credit: Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA630678_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: FULL COPY ON REQUEST: Sir Richard Branson’s new cruise ship Scarlet Lady sits forlornly at dock in Miami along with four other giant liners yesterday (Sunday) as the usually heaving terminals resembled ghost towns because of the coronavirus crisis. Miami is the world’s busiest cruise port with 5.5million passengers a year. But yesterday at 4pm – when ships traditionally sail amid fanfare and horns blasting their farewell – there was an eerie silence. The Florida cruise port is usually bustling with excited passengers, truck and van deliveries of food and drink, rammed parking lots and packed lines of taxis in a cacophony of noise and mayhem. Yet yesterday there was hardly a soul about. The parking garages were virtually empty, the usually crammed individual terminals were lifeless and the roads were deserted. Apart from a handful of departing passengers only a few dejected port workers, who are about to be laid off, were milling around. One of the ships at dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) is at the center of controversy after it was revealed it had a passenger who tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. The passenger disembarked from MSC Meraviglia (correct) on March 8 after an eight-day Caribbean cruise. After the passenger got off, 103 others plus the vessels crew were left on board for the next voyage. Four days later, after the ship had sailed with thousands more people, the cruise line was told by Canadian authorities that the passenger had tested positive. Seven crew were isolated as a result. But instead of holding the ship off the Florida coast and testing everyone on board for COVID-19, MSC said US health authorities cleared the ship to dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) and for the 3,877 passengers to disembark as normal. As a result, thousands of people got off the ship without undergoing medical screening. 15 Mar 2020 Pictured: Cruise Ships. Photo credit: Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA630678_019.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: FULL COPY ON REQUEST: Sir Richard Branson’s new cruise ship Scarlet Lady sits forlornly at dock in Miami along with four other giant liners yesterday (Sunday) as the usually heaving terminals resembled ghost towns because of the coronavirus crisis. Miami is the world’s busiest cruise port with 5.5million passengers a year. But yesterday at 4pm – when ships traditionally sail amid fanfare and horns blasting their farewell – there was an eerie silence. The Florida cruise port is usually bustling with excited passengers, truck and van deliveries of food and drink, rammed parking lots and packed lines of taxis in a cacophony of noise and mayhem. Yet yesterday there was hardly a soul about. The parking garages were virtually empty, the usually crammed individual terminals were lifeless and the roads were deserted. Apart from a handful of departing passengers only a few dejected port workers, who are about to be laid off, were milling around. One of the ships at dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) is at the center of controversy after it was revealed it had a passenger who tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. The passenger disembarked from MSC Meraviglia (correct) on March 8 after an eight-day Caribbean cruise. After the passenger got off, 103 others plus the vessels crew were left on board for the next voyage. Four days later, after the ship had sailed with thousands more people, the cruise line was told by Canadian authorities that the passenger had tested positive. Seven crew were isolated as a result. But instead of holding the ship off the Florida coast and testing everyone on board for COVID-19, MSC said US health authorities cleared the ship to dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) and for the 3,877 passengers to disembark as normal. As a result, thousands of people got off the ship without undergoing medical screening. 15 Mar 2020 Pictured: Cruise Ships. Photo credit: Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA630678_015.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: FULL COPY ON REQUEST: Sir Richard Branson’s new cruise ship Scarlet Lady sits forlornly at dock in Miami along with four other giant liners yesterday (Sunday) as the usually heaving terminals resembled ghost towns because of the coronavirus crisis. Miami is the world’s busiest cruise port with 5.5million passengers a year. But yesterday at 4pm – when ships traditionally sail amid fanfare and horns blasting their farewell – there was an eerie silence. The Florida cruise port is usually bustling with excited passengers, truck and van deliveries of food and drink, rammed parking lots and packed lines of taxis in a cacophony of noise and mayhem. Yet yesterday there was hardly a soul about. The parking garages were virtually empty, the usually crammed individual terminals were lifeless and the roads were deserted. Apart from a handful of departing passengers only a few dejected port workers, who are about to be laid off, were milling around. One of the ships at dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) is at the center of controversy after it was revealed it had a passenger who tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. The passenger disembarked from MSC Meraviglia (correct) on March 8 after an eight-day Caribbean cruise. After the passenger got off, 103 others plus the vessels crew were left on board for the next voyage. Four days later, after the ship had sailed with thousands more people, the cruise line was told by Canadian authorities that the passenger had tested positive. Seven crew were isolated as a result. But instead of holding the ship off the Florida coast and testing everyone on board for COVID-19, MSC said US health authorities cleared the ship to dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) and for the 3,877 passengers to disembark as normal. As a result, thousands of people got off the ship without undergoing medical screening. 15 Mar 2020 Pictured: Cruise Ships. Photo credit: Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA630678_016.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: FULL COPY ON REQUEST: Sir Richard Branson’s new cruise ship Scarlet Lady sits forlornly at dock in Miami along with four other giant liners yesterday (Sunday) as the usually heaving terminals resembled ghost towns because of the coronavirus crisis. Miami is the world’s busiest cruise port with 5.5million passengers a year. But yesterday at 4pm – when ships traditionally sail amid fanfare and horns blasting their farewell – there was an eerie silence. The Florida cruise port is usually bustling with excited passengers, truck and van deliveries of food and drink, rammed parking lots and packed lines of taxis in a cacophony of noise and mayhem. Yet yesterday there was hardly a soul about. The parking garages were virtually empty, the usually crammed individual terminals were lifeless and the roads were deserted. Apart from a handful of departing passengers only a few dejected port workers, who are about to be laid off, were milling around. One of the ships at dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) is at the center of controversy after it was revealed it had a passenger who tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. The passenger disembarked from MSC Meraviglia (correct) on March 8 after an eight-day Caribbean cruise. After the passenger got off, 103 others plus the vessels crew were left on board for the next voyage. Four days later, after the ship had sailed with thousands more people, the cruise line was told by Canadian authorities that the passenger had tested positive. Seven crew were isolated as a result. But instead of holding the ship off the Florida coast and testing everyone on board for COVID-19, MSC said US health authorities cleared the ship to dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) and for the 3,877 passengers to disembark as normal. As a result, thousands of people got off the ship without undergoing medical screening. 15 Mar 2020 Pictured: Cruise Ships. Photo credit: Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA630678_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: FULL COPY ON REQUEST: Sir Richard Branson’s new cruise ship Scarlet Lady sits forlornly at dock in Miami along with four other giant liners yesterday (Sunday) as the usually heaving terminals resembled ghost towns because of the coronavirus crisis. Miami is the world’s busiest cruise port with 5.5million passengers a year. But yesterday at 4pm – when ships traditionally sail amid fanfare and horns blasting their farewell – there was an eerie silence. The Florida cruise port is usually bustling with excited passengers, truck and van deliveries of food and drink, rammed parking lots and packed lines of taxis in a cacophony of noise and mayhem. Yet yesterday there was hardly a soul about. The parking garages were virtually empty, the usually crammed individual terminals were lifeless and the roads were deserted. Apart from a handful of departing passengers only a few dejected port workers, who are about to be laid off, were milling around. One of the ships at dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) is at the center of controversy after it was revealed it had a passenger who tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19. The passenger disembarked from MSC Meraviglia (correct) on March 8 after an eight-day Caribbean cruise. After the passenger got off, 103 others plus the vessels crew were left on board for the next voyage. Four days later, after the ship had sailed with thousands more people, the cruise line was told by Canadian authorities that the passenger had tested positive. Seven crew were isolated as a result. But instead of holding the ship off the Florida coast and testing everyone on board for COVID-19, MSC said US health authorities cleared the ship to dock in Miami yesterday (March 15) and for the 3,877 passengers to disembark as normal. As a result, thousands of people got off the ship without undergoing medical screening. 15 Mar 2020 Pictured: Cruise Ships. Photo credit: Greg Woodfield / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA630678_017.jpg
  • Sir Richard Branson surveys the aftermath of Hurricane Irma and the damage to his private paradise island Necker. The British billionaire Virgin boss is pictured on the island getting to grips with the scale of the damage. Damage visible in the aftermath of the monster storm includes trees ripped from the ground and buildings destroyed. 11 Sep 2017 Pictured: Sir Richard Branson looks over the damage Hurricane Irma caused to his private paradise island Necker. Photo credit: Virgin/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • Sir Richard Branson surveys the aftermath of Hurricane Irma and the damage to his private paradise island Necker. The British billionaire Virgin boss is pictured on the island getting to grips with the scale of the damage. Damage visible in the aftermath of the monster storm includes trees ripped from the ground and buildings destroyed. 11 Sep 2017 Pictured: Sir Richard Branson looks over the damage Hurricane Irma caused to his private paradise island Necker. Photo credit: Virgin/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • Sir Richard Branson surveys the aftermath of Hurricane Irma and the damage to his private paradise island Necker. The British billionaire Virgin boss is pictured on the island getting to grips with the scale of the damage. Damage visible in the aftermath of the monster storm includes trees ripped from the ground and buildings destroyed. 11 Sep 2017 Pictured: Sir Richard Branson looks over the damage Hurricane Irma caused to his private paradise island Necker. Photo credit: Virgin/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • Sir Richard Branson surveys the aftermath of Hurricane Irma and the damage to his private paradise island Necker. The British billionaire Virgin boss is pictured on the island getting to grips with the scale of the damage. Damage visible in the aftermath of the monster storm includes trees ripped from the ground and buildings destroyed. 11 Sep 2017 Pictured: Sir Richard Branson looks over the damage Hurricane Irma caused to his private paradise island Necker. Photo credit: Virgin/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • Sir Richard Branson surveys the aftermath of Hurricane Irma and the damage to his private paradise island Necker. The British billionaire Virgin boss is pictured on the island getting to grips with the scale of the damage. Damage visible in the aftermath of the monster storm includes trees ripped from the ground and buildings destroyed. 11 Sep 2017 Pictured: Sir Richard Branson looks over the damage Hurricane Irma caused to his private paradise island Necker. Photo credit: Virgin/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • Sir Richard Branson emerged unscathed from Hurricane Irma after bunkering down in his wine cellar on his private Caribbean island. However Branson’s Necker Island and surrounding areas of the British Virgin Islands were left devastated by the hurricane - the largest ever recorded on the Atlantic Ocean. The Virgin Group mogul previously explained that his Necker compound had been built with reinforced hurricane blinds, designed to withstand huge winds. Taking to Instagram on Thursday [September 7], the day after the hurricane hit, Branson wrote: “All of the team who stayed on Necker and Moskito during the hurricane are safe and well. Our thoughts are with everyone affected by Hurricane #Irma in the BVI & Caribbean. “I’ve never seen anything like it. Urge all in its path to seek strong shelter & stay safe. Necker & whole area has been completely devastated.” Earlier on Wednesday [September 6] before Irma hit, Branson shared photos on social media of his team smiling and bedded down in a room. “Expecting full force in about 4 hours, we'll retreat into a concrete wine cellar under the house. Wonderful team calm and upbeat,” Branson wrote in a social media post. Irma is currently barreling towards the U.S. and is set to wreak more devastation. It is expected to make landfall Sunday [September 10] morning in South Florida. 08 Sep 2017 Pictured: Richard Branson shared photos of himself and his team bunkering down at his compound on his privately owned Caribbean island, Necker, as Hurricane Irma approached. Photo credit: Virgin.com/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • Sir Richard Branson emerged unscathed from Hurricane Irma after bunkering down in his wine cellar on his private Caribbean island. However Branson’s Necker Island and surrounding areas of the British Virgin Islands were left devastated by the hurricane - the largest ever recorded on the Atlantic Ocean. The Virgin Group mogul previously explained that his Necker compound had been built with reinforced hurricane blinds, designed to withstand huge winds. Taking to Instagram on Thursday [September 7], the day after the hurricane hit, Branson wrote: “All of the team who stayed on Necker and Moskito during the hurricane are safe and well. Our thoughts are with everyone affected by Hurricane #Irma in the BVI & Caribbean. “I’ve never seen anything like it. Urge all in its path to seek strong shelter & stay safe. Necker & whole area has been completely devastated.” Earlier on Wednesday [September 6] before Irma hit, Branson shared photos on social media of his team smiling and bedded down in a room. “Expecting full force in about 4 hours, we'll retreat into a concrete wine cellar under the house. Wonderful team calm and upbeat,” Branson wrote in a social media post. Irma is currently barreling towards the U.S. and is set to wreak more devastation. It is expected to make landfall Sunday [September 10] morning in South Florida. 08 Sep 2017 Pictured: Richard Branson shared photos of himself and his team bunkering down at his compound on his privately owned Caribbean island, Necker, as Hurricane Irma approached. Photo credit: Virgin.com/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • Sir Richard Branson emerged unscathed from Hurricane Irma after bunkering down in his wine cellar on his private Caribbean island. However Branson’s Necker Island and surrounding areas of the British Virgin Islands were left devastated by the hurricane - the largest ever recorded on the Atlantic Ocean. The Virgin Group mogul previously explained that his Necker compound had been built with reinforced hurricane blinds, designed to withstand huge winds. Taking to Instagram on Thursday [September 7], the day after the hurricane hit, Branson wrote: “All of the team who stayed on Necker and Moskito during the hurricane are safe and well. Our thoughts are with everyone affected by Hurricane #Irma in the BVI & Caribbean. “I’ve never seen anything like it. Urge all in its path to seek strong shelter & stay safe. Necker & whole area has been completely devastated.” Earlier on Wednesday [September 6] before Irma hit, Branson shared photos on social media of his team smiling and bedded down in a room. “Expecting full force in about 4 hours, we'll retreat into a concrete wine cellar under the house. Wonderful team calm and upbeat,” Branson wrote in a social media post. Irma is currently barreling towards the U.S. and is set to wreak more devastation. It is expected to make landfall Sunday [September 10] morning in South Florida. 08 Sep 2017 Pictured: Richard Branson shared photos of himself and his team bunkering down at his compound on his privately owned Caribbean island, Necker, as Hurricane Irma approached. Photo credit: Virgin.com/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman Al-Saud meets with Sir Richard Branson, (left) Founder of Virgin Group, during a visit to Virgin Galactic in Mojave, California, United States of America, on April 1st, 2018. The tour is part of Saudi Crown Prince to the United States of America. Photo by Balkis Press/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman Al-Saud meets with Sir Richard Branson, (left) Founder of Virgin Group, during a visit to Virgin Galactic in Mojave, California, United States of America, on April 1st, 2018. The tour is part of Saudi Crown Prince to the United States of America. Photo by Balkis Press/ABACAPRESS.COM
    631452_008.jpg
  • Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman Al-Saud (2nd from L) meets with Sir Richard Branson, (left) Founder of Virgin Group, during a visit to Virgin Galactic in Mojave, California, United States of America, on April 1st, 2018. The tour is part of Saudi Crown Prince to the United States of America. Photo by Balkis Press/ABACAPRESS.COM
    631452_004.jpg
  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
    599944_015.jpg
  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
    599944_012.jpg
  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
    599944_009.jpg
  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
    599944_005.jpg
  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
    599944_002.jpg
  • Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman Al-Saud meets with Sir Richard Branson, (left) Founder of Virgin Group, during a visit to Virgin Galactic in Mojave, California, United States of America, on April 1st, 2018. The tour is part of Saudi Crown Prince to the United States of America. Photo by Balkis Press/ABACAPRESS.COM
    631452_007.jpg
  • Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman Al-Saud (left) meets with Sir Richard Branson, Founder of Virgin Group, during a visit to Virgin Galactic in Mojave, California, United States of America, on April 1st, 2018. The tour is part of Saudi Crown Prince to the United States of America. Photo by Balkis Press/ABACAPRESS.COM
    631452_006.jpg
  • Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman Al-Saud (center) meets with Sir Richard Branson, (left) Founder of Virgin Group, during a visit to Virgin Galactic in Mojave, California, United States of America, on April 1st, 2018. The tour is part of Saudi Crown Prince to the United States of America. Photo by Balkis Press/ABACAPRESS.COM
    631452_005.jpg
  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
    599944_019.jpg
  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
    599944_018.jpg
  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
    599944_017.jpg
  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
    599944_014.jpg
  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
    599944_011.jpg
  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
    599944_007.jpg
  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
    599944_006.jpg
  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
    599944_004.jpg
  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
    599944_003.jpg
  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
    599944_021.jpg
  • Sir Richard Branson Lights up the Empire State Building in DS Virgin Racing Colors in New York City, NY, USA on July 14, 2017. Photo by Dennis Van tine/ABACAPRESS.COM
    599944_008.jpg
  • The Prince of Wales (second left) talks to Sir Richard Branson (right) who lost his home in Hurricane Irma, as he attends a community reception at Government House in The British Virgin Islands, as he continues his tour of hurricane-ravaged Caribbean islands.
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  • Sir Richard Branson during the Virgin Hotels Groundbreaking event at India Buildings, Edinburgh. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Wednesday May 23, 2018. Photo credit should read: Robert Perry/PA Wire
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  • Sir Richard Branson during the Virgin Hotels Groundbreaking event at India Buildings, Edinburgh. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Wednesday May 23, 2018. Photo credit should read: Robert Perry/PA Wire
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  • The Prince of Wales (right) talks to Sir Richard Branson (left) who lost his home in Hurricane Irma, as he attends a community reception at Government House in The British Virgin Islands, as he continues his tour of hurricane-ravaged Caribbean islands.
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  • Sir Richard Branson addresses the Innovation Summit during round Ten of the FIA Formula E Championship at Battersea Park, London.
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  • Sir Richard Branson during the Virgin Hotels groundbreaking event at India Buildings, Edinburgh.
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  • Sir Richard Branson during the Virgin Hotels Groundbreaking event at India Buildings, Edinburgh. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Wednesday May 23, 2018. Photo credit should read: Robert Perry/PA Wire
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  • EDITORIAL USE ONLY<br />
(Left to right) Holly Ransom CEO at Emergent, Sir Richard Branson, Solly Solomou co-founder of The LAD Bible, Emma Sinclair founder of EnterpriseJungle and Peter Smith CEO at Blockchain speak at the Virgin Disruptors conference, which discusses innovation and change across the business world, at The Mermaid Theatre, in London.
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  • EDITORIAL USE ONLY<br />
Sir Richard Branson speaks at the Virgin Disruptors conference, which discusses innovation and change across the business world, at The Mermaid Theatre, in London.
    28822698.jpg
  • EDITORIAL USE ONLY Sir Richard Branson at the launch of Virgin Holidays Departure Beach in Barbados.
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  • Sir Richard Branson during the Virgin Hotels groundbreaking event at India Buildings, Edinburgh.
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  • Raul Leal , CEO Virgin Hotels (left) and Sir Richard Branson in the Rotunda during the Virgin Hotels groundbreaking event at India Buildings, Edinburgh.
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  • Sir Richard Branson and Raul Leal, CEO Virgin Hotels (right) during the Virgin Hotels groundbreaking event at India Buildings, Edinburgh.
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  • Sir Richard Branson during the Virgin Hotels groundbreaking event at India Buildings, Edinburgh.
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  • Sir Richard Branson (L) and Raul Leal, CEO Virgin Hotels (R) during the Virgin Hotels Groundbreaking event at India Buildings, Edinburgh. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Wednesday May 23, 2018. Photo credit should read: Robert Perry/PA Wire
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  • Sir Richard Branson during the Virgin Hotels Groundbreaking event at India Buildings, Edinburgh. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Wednesday May 23, 2018. Photo credit should read: Robert Perry/PA Wire
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  • Sir Richard Branson during the Virgin Hotels Groundbreaking event at India Buildings, Edinburgh. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Wednesday May 23, 2018. Photo credit should read: Robert Perry/PA Wire
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  • Sir Richard Branson in the Rotunda during the Virgin Hotels Groundbreaking event at India Buildings, Edinburgh. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Wednesday May 23, 2018. Photo credit should read: Robert Perry/PA Wire
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  • Raul Leal , CEO Virgin Hotels (L) and Sir Richard Branson (R) in the Rotunda during the Virgin Hotels Groundbreaking event at India Buildings, Edinburgh. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Wednesday May 23, 2018. Photo credit should read: Robert Perry/PA Wire
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  • Sir Richard Branson during the Virgin Hotels Groundbreaking event at India Buildings, Edinburgh. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Wednesday May 23, 2018. Photo credit should read: Robert Perry/PA Wire
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  • File Photo - Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman, also known as MBS, (right) receives Sir Richard Branson in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on October 26, 2017. A new Saudi anti-corruption body has detained 11 princes, four sitting ministers and dozens of former ministers, media reports say. The detentions came hours after the new committee, headed by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, was formed by royal decree. Photo by Balkis Press/ABACAPRESS.COM  | 613893_002 Riyadh Arabie Saoudite Saudi Arabia
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  • EDITORIAL USE ONLY<br />
(Left to right) Emma Sinclair founder of EnterpriseJungle, Peter Smith CEO at Blockchain, Solly Solomou co-founder of The LAD Bible, Sir Richard Branson and Holly Ransom CEO at Emergent at the Virgin Disruptors conference, which discusses innovation and change across the business world, at The Mermaid Theatre, in London.
    28822700.jpg
  • EDITORIAL USE ONLY<br />
(Left to right) Holly Ransom CEO at Emergent, Sir Richard Branson, Solly Solomou co-founder of The LAD Bible, Emma Sinclair founder of EnterpriseJungle and Peter Smith CEO at Blockchain speak at the Virgin Disruptors conference, which discusses innovation and change across the business world, at The Mermaid Theatre, in London.
    28822696.jpg
  • Sir Richard Branson in the Rotunda during the Virgin Hotels groundbreaking event at India Buildings, Edinburgh.
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  • Sir Richard Branson during the Virgin Hotels groundbreaking event at India Buildings, Edinburgh.
    36652117.jpg
  • Sir Richard Branson (L) and Raul Leal, CEO Virgin Hotels (R) during the Virgin Hotels Groundbreaking event at India Buildings, Edinburgh. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Wednesday May 23, 2018. Photo credit should read: Robert Perry/PA Wire
    36652060.jpg
  • Sir Richard Branson during the Virgin Hotels Groundbreaking event at India Buildings, Edinburgh. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Wednesday May 23, 2018. Photo credit should read: Robert Perry/PA Wire
    36652053.jpg
  • EDITORIAL USE ONLY<br />
(Left to right) Emma Sinclair founder of EnterpriseJungle, Peter Smith CEO at Blockchain, Solly Solomou co-founder of The LAD Bible, Sir Richard Branson and Holly Ransom CEO at Emergent at the Virgin Disruptors conference, which discusses innovation and change across the business world, at The Mermaid Theatre, in London.
    28822700.jpg