Virus renews safety concerns on slaughtering wild animals

Police look at items seized from store suspected of trafficking wildlife in Guangde city in central China's Anhui Province in this Jan. 9, 2020 photo. As China enforces a temporary ban on the wildlife trade to contain the outbreak of a new virus, many are calling for a more permanent solution before disaster strikes again. ANTI-POACHING SPECIAL SQUAD VIA AP
Police look at items seized from store suspected of trafficking wildlife in Guangde city in central China's Anhui Province in this Jan. 9, 2020 photo. As China enforces a temporary ban on the wildlife trade to contain the outbreak of a new virus, many are calling for a more permanent solution before disaster strikes again. ANTI-POACHING SPECIAL SQUAD VIA AP

BEIJING – China cracked down on the sale of exotic species after an outbreak of a new virus in 2002 was linked to markets selling live animals. The germ turned out to be a coronavirus that caused SARS.

The ban was later lifted, and the animals reappeared. Now another coronavirus is spreading through China, so far killing 1,380 people and sickening more than 64,000 — eight times the number sickened by SARS.

The suspected origin? The same type of market.

With more than 60 million people under lockdown in more than a dozen Chinese cities, the new outbreak is prompting calls to permanently ban the sale of wildlife, which many say is being fueled by a limited group of wealthy people who consider the animals delicacies. The spreading illness also serves as a grim reminder that how animals are handled anywhere can endanger people everywhere. (AP)

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