Please don’t tell Denis Potvin I said so, but No....

An unidentified passenger from the MS Westerdam receives temperature scanning during arrival in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.

Westerdam passengers may have made it off the ship — but they still can’t make it home.

Problems for the passengers on the cruise ship — which was finally allowed to port in Sihanoukville, Cambodia — are just starting as they find it difficult to book flights home — and those on flights can’t find countries to accept them.

Fears over Holland America’s Westerdam passengers have heightened since a passenger later tested positive for the coronavirus after the ship was allowed to dock in Cambodia on Feb. 13.

A plane full of Americans and Canadians was stranded on a tarmac at an airport in Karachi, Pakistan, for several hours on Thursday after it was turned away from multiple countries due to fears of the coronavirus, according to Yahoo.

The plane was finally allowed to fly to Amsterdam — but no word on what has happened since then.

“En route the flight was unexpectedly instructed by Turkish officials to turn around midway through its journey,” Holland America told Yahoo in a statement. “The plane stopped for refueling at the airport in Karachi, Pakistan and then departed at 2:10 a.m. for Amsterdam, where we have received approval from the Dutch Government for landing.”

Victor, a former Navy officer, and Karen Chrjapin, both retired in their late 60s and retired, were both on the flight.

The Chrjapin’s daughter Kelly said her parents sent her a text saying, “We’re on a tarmac in Pakistan. Help.”

“I have not been able to get anything back from them since,” Chrjapin told Yahoo. “I assume they had to turn their phones off and went wheels up. … Now the question is getting them out of Amsterdam. That’s a whole other kettle of fish,” she said.

Meanwhile, other Westerdam passengers are still stuck in Cambodia.

“We’re in this sort of surreal world,” Lydia Miller, 55, of Orcas Island, Washington, told Komo News. Miller and her husband are camped out at a hotel in the capital, Phnom Penh, waiting for word on how they might be able to return to the US “It’s a weird feeling to travel and go on a trip and you don’t know when you can come home.”

There have been some Westerdamers who have made it home. A Maui man made it home via Seoul, South Korea, last week — a country that is now an epicenter of another outbreak — and comedian Frank King made it back to the states after immediately ignoring a request to remain in Cambodia.