reported.
The only alternative was for the plane to refuel and fly straight back to Italy, it is claimed.
Alitalia said it the Mauritius authorities put in place provisions for the quarantining of passengers from the Lombardy and Venice regions - but had not told it before the flight took off.
They are now being prepared for immediate return to, although none of them has any symptoms.
Just a few packs of pasta were left on the shelves at this store in in Rozzano, near Milan Credit: AP:Associated Press A lone cyclist rides past the closed gates of a Unilever plant near Milan Credit: Getty Images - Getty A closed down railway station in Casalpusterlengo, south-west Milan Credit: Getty Images - Getty A cemetery closed due to coronavirus emergency in Casalpusterlengo Credit: EPA The escalating outbreak has also sparked fears half-term holidaymakers returning from Italy could spread the terrifying epidemic across Europe.
And one BA flight from Heathrow to Milan was delayed yesterday when a passenger reportedly refused to fly to virus-ravaged Italy.
The outbreak has already led to the cancellation of the Venice Carnival, Milan Fashion Week and multiple Serie A football clashes.
Earlier it was revealed the outbreak had also shutdown Giorgio Armani’s high-profile Milan fashion show.
The industry icon decided it would be safer to show his latest collection to an empty theatre and stream it online rather than risk guests becoming infected.
Cops and troops have already been drafted in to seal off towns in a sweeping crackdown while the Italian
It was the first time the 45-year-old Milan fashion house has taken such a step out of public health concerns.
PM announced there would be "extraordinary measures" to quarantine tens of thousands of people.
Panicked authorities in towns within Lombardy and Veneto have ordered schools, businesses and restaurants as more and more Italians contract the killer bug .
The concerns come after retired bricklayer Adriano Trevisan, 78, died in hospital in Padua on Friday evening - becoming the first European to die from coronavirus.
On Saturday night, an Italian woman whose identity is yet to be released, also died in Lombardy.
Regional councillor Giulio Gallera confirmed a third person had died after catching the virus.
Milan's virtually deserted Central Railway Station during morning rush hour Credit: EPA Three people wearing haz-mat style suits on the Milan metro Credit: Splash News Tourists wearing protective face masks visit the Piazza San Marco, in Venice Credit: AFP or licensors A young tourist wearing a protective face mask and a Carnival mask visits the streets of Venice Credit: AFP or licensors Serie A football matches in northern Italy were also cancelled as a precaution Credit: Reuters A cop in Venice wears a protective mask as the city's carnival is shutdown over coronavirus fears Credit: EPA Retired bricklayer Adriano Trevisan, 78, died in hospital in Padua on Friday evening - becoming the first European to die from coronavirus Credit: Vanessa Trevisan There has been at least 200 cases of the killer bug reported in northern Italy.
The include 112 in Lombardy - including two in Milan - and 22 in Veneto.
Health officials also reported isolated cases in the neighbouring regions of Piedmont and Emilia Romagna.
Dozens of people have now been put in medical isolation and are awaiting test results.
Health authorities are struggling to work out how the outbreak started.
The first cases were announced only on Friday and doctors do not know its source.
Initial suspicion in Lombardy fell on a businessman recently returned from China, the epicentre of the new virus, but he has tested negative.
In Veneto, doctors tested a group of eight Chinese visitors who had been to the town that was home to the first fatality, but again, they all tested negative.
"We are (now) even more worried because if we cannot find 'patient zero' then it means the virus is even more ubiquitous than we thought," Regional governor of Veneto, Luca Zaia said.
Prior to Friday, Italy had reported just three cases of the virus - all of them people who had recently arrived from the Chinese city of Wuhan, where the illness emerged last year.
The World Health Organization (WHO) said it was concerned by the upsurge in new cases and a lack of clarity over its spread.
"I am sending a ... team to Italy to work together to learn about virus spread and (how to) contain it," the WHO's European Regional Director Hans Kluge said on Twitter.
Ambulances and health workers are seen transporting a patient outside the Padua's Hospital, northern Italy Credit: EPA Many businesses in affected regions are under lockdown Credit: AFP or licensors
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