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Morning brief: Wuhan coronavirus update for Feb 8, 2020

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The latest updates on the Wuhan coronavirus. Infographic: The Independent SG (*The total death count now stands at 638)

As of 5am, Feb 8, 2020:

WORLD COUNT: There are 31,537 confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) in the world. A total of 28 countries and territories have been affected so far. The number of deaths has risen to 638. Across the world, a total of 4,826 are in critical condition, while 1,780 previously infected persons have recovered.

CHINA: There are 31,210 confirmed cases of infection in China. The country’s death count now stands at 636 people. In China, public anger has risen over the lack of medical supplies in hospitals across the country, despite the Chinese Red Cross receiving US$86 million (S$119 million) in donations. Three officials from the charity were punished for mishandling the donations. After the death of Chinese whistleblower doctor Li Wenliang, Chinese social media has erupted with anger against the government’s handling of the 2019-nCoV outbreak. Hong Kong has confirmed its two latest cases of the virus, bringing the total country tally to 26. Meanwhile, thousands of medical workers in the country have ended their five-day strike demanding that the government close borders with China after members voted not to continue it. Hong Kong’s Government has announced that all travellers from China who refuse to undergo the mandatory quarantine for 2019-nCoV may be jailed for six months. The World Dream cruise ship is still at Hong Kong’s Kai Tak Cruise Terminal, with more than 3,600 passengers and crew members on board being inspected for symptoms of 2019-nCoV. Cruise ship The Westerdam is currently in the middle of the East China Sea, unable to find somewhere to dock after being refused entry by both Taiwan and Japan over fears of virus contamination. Macao’s case count remains at 10.

SINGAPORE: Three more cases of the virus have been reported in Singapore, bringing its total to 33. Outside of mainland China, only Japan has more confirmed cases. All three latest cases are Singaporean citizens with no travel history to China. They are currently in isolation. Following the growing number of local transmission cases in Singapore, the Ministry of Health (MOH) has raised the Disease Outbreak Response System Condition alert level will be raised to orange, the second highest. Large-scale events and inter-school activities will be cancelled, and daily health screenings will be conducted at workplaces.

ASEAN: Malaysia was the only country to declare a new case of the virus in the region. Its new tally of confirmed cases has risen to 15. No other countries in the region reported new cases of the virus.

ASIA: Only Japan has more cases than this outside mainland China, with 25 infections on land, and 61 aboard a cruise ship quarantined near Tokyo. The country’s total case count is up to 86 persons. The cruise ship Diamond Princess is under quarantine off the coast of Yokohama, with 1,045 crew and 2,666 passengers on board. At least 61 persons on the ship have tested positive for the virus. Japan’s fourth flight evacuating citizens from Wuhan has landed in Tokyo, with 198 Japanese citizens and their family members on board. All will be placed under quarantine. Japan had already repatriated more than 550 of its citizens out of Wuhan. South Korea has also confirmed an additional case of 2019-nCoV, bringing the national total to 24 confirmed cases. No other countries in the region reported new cases of the virus.

EUROPE: A scientist from the United Kingdom is working on developing a vaccine for the novel coronavirus. Robin Shattock of Imperial College London said that a treatment could be ready by early 2021. World Health Organization (WHO) chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus announced that there is a worldwide “chronic shortage” of medical equipment needed to combat the coronavirus. Ghebreyesus and WHO will be working with the Pandemic Supply Chain Network to find solutions. Germany reported a new case of the virus, bringing the national total to 14. No other countries in the region reported new cases of the virus.

AMERICA: Two American flights from Wuhan carrying American citizens have landed in the US and Canada, officials have confirmed. All persons on board will be placed under quarantine and screened for a period of time. The United States currently has a confirmed case count of 12 persons. Canada, which has seven confirmed cases of the virus, has repatriated 176 of its citizens out of Wuhan, China. All passengers will be checked and isolated upon their return. Passengers on a cruise ship that docked Friday morning (Feb 7) near New York City will be inspected in port for any signs of 2019-nCoV. No other countries in the region reported new cases of the virus.

AUSTRALIA: Australia, which has 15 cases of the virus, will quarantine patients in a mining camp in Darwin, the capital of Australia’s Northern Territory. There is another isolation centre on Christmas Island, but it does not allow proper segregation of people in the facility. New Zealand has not reported any cases of 2019-nCoV.

AFRICA: As of yet, no confirmed cases of the Wuhan coronavirus have been reported in the region.

 

/TISG

Shenzhen police arrest woman for refusing to wear mask

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Facebook screengrab: Aristegui Noticias

Shenzhen — A woman was wrestled to the ground and arrested by police recently for allegedly refusing to wear a face mask amid the novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) outbreak in China.

On Jan 26, the local government of Shenzhen in southern Guangdong province ordered its estimated 113 million citizens to wear surgical face masks when in public areas. Violations of the order were made a punishable offence, according to a report on Feb 2 by The Sun UK.

The woman, whose surname is Qui, was believed to be in violation of the province-wide order. The 51-year-old was confronted by several shoppers in the Space supermarket, inside the Kingkey Banner Center shopping mall, to put on a face mask or leave the premises. She refused, argued with them and allegedly spat at them.

Police were soon at the scene. Video footage has been circulating online of the woman struggling with police officers in the supermarket. She was eventually pinned down and had her hands tied behind her back.

The authorities confirmed that Qui was taken to Kangning Hospital, where she tested negative for 2019-nCoV. She was discharged and transferred to the Shenzhen police for further questioning.

There has been no update on whether she will be punished for refusing to wear a face mask.

Qui’s disregard for public safety, however, is unwarranted. A Space supermarket spokesperson said all its shops are required to disinfect its premises every two hours as a precautionary measure against the spread of the coronavirus.

There are increasing concerns about this as there have been 636 deaths and 31,161 confirmed cases.

Watch the YouTube video posted by Mega News below.

In other news:

Diabetic S’porean unable to get alcohol swabs from pharmacy for injections, because they are used to wipe and disinfect tables

Wuhan coronavirus kills doctor who sounded alarm in early days of outbreak

K Shanmugam berates Muslim religious teacher and Preetipls for racist, xenophobic comments

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Singapore's Minister of Law Kasiviswanathan Shanmugam speaks during a press conference along with deputy speaker of the parliament and chairman of the Select Committee on Deliberate Online Falsehoods, in Singapore on September 20, 2018. (Photo by Roslan RAHMAN / AFP)

The Minister for Law and Home Affairs (MHA) K Shanmugam announced on Friday (Feb 7) that he had asked the MHA to look into remarks made by a religious teacher over the deadly novel coronavirus.

In a Facebook post, Mr Shanmugam wrote that “the current situation has brought out the worst in some”.

Adding that the religious teacher Abdul Halim bin Abdul Karim “says that the coronavirus was retribution by Allah against Chinese for oppressing Muslim Uighurs”, Mr Shanmugam noted that “Such comments are quite unacceptable from anyone, let alone someone who is supposed to be a religious teacher”.

Making an example out of Chen Jianbang who was charged for making racist comments against Malays, Mr Shanmugam also pointed out the incident where YouTuber Preeti Nair, known as Preetipls, made and “circulated a thoroughly racist video, calling Chinese “fools”, running down CNY traditions. She played a scene, for example, where ang pow money was equated with money collected from prostitution”.

Ms Nair last year received a conditional warning for a controversial rap video that questioned the use of “brownface” in an advertisement.

“Abdul Halim’s comments against Chinese in general (including Singaporean Chinese) are simply unacceptable – and these can’t be left alone”, Mr Shanmugam said.

Religious teacher responds, apologises

In a Facebook post earlier today (Feb 7), Mr Abdul Halim bin Abdul Karim responded to Mr Shanmugam’s comments, with a “Public Clarification and Apology”.

He wrote: “The fact is that there is nothing in my post, written in Malay, that is intended to be racist. I am merely referring to the fact about those who do not use soap and water to clean themselves (In Islam that is called istinjak and it is part of the basic principles of Islamic faith of purifying oneself from impurities (Taharah) ) after doing their business. This is in light of reports about the spread of the virus through contamination with human feaces. It is in the context of this worrying development that I made my post”.

He added that he did not make his Facebook post about any particular race at all. /TISG

It’s fake, says CNA of viral tweet on closure of schools

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Photo: from Twitter / @ChannelNewsAsia

A tweet on Friday (Feb 7) that appeared as if it was put up by the official Twitter account of Channel News Asia went viral after it declared that, effective Monday (Feb 10), all schools in Singapore would be closed until further notice.

“This is untrue and CNA did not send such a tweet,” it stated in an article posted not long after the fake tweet went viral. The false tweet was apparently taken from an original tweet by CNA and doctored to look like it was legitimate. The original CNA tweet was a football story titled “Football: Could Neymar, Mbappe antics derail PSG as season enters crunch time?”

CNA pointed out a couple of things in the fake tweet. Firstly, the automated social media posting service used by CNA, dlvr.it, puts up a headline and a link. It does not use hashtags. In the doctored tweet, however, there was no headline link. Aside from this, a “#CoronavirusOutbreak” was used. The time-stamp of the original and the doctored tweet were also the same.

Photo: from Twitter / @ChannelNewsAsia

Another sign of the viral tweet’s falsehood was the outdated watermark in the doctored image. At the bottom right was a Mediacorp logo. However, according to CNA, Mediacorp has been using an updated logo since 2015.

Photo: from Twitter / @ChannelNewsAsia

The Ministry of Health also released a statement on its Facebook page about the tweet being false. It reiterated the importance of getting information only from credible sources and added: “We advise members of the public to not speculate and/or spread unfounded rumours.”

Updates on the 2019-nCoV situation can be found on the MOH website.

Why there are no queues for the free masks at CCs

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FB screengrab: Complaint Singapore

Singapore — After news that the novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) was spreading in China, surgical masks were snapped up in Singapore, with long queues snaking outside stores, and a few unscrupulous merchants raising prices.

There were photos of people with boxes of surgical masks, leading some people to wonder if the supply would be enough for the country’s needs for the duration of the outbreak.

Trade and Industry Minister Chan Chun Sing gave the assurance that Singapore’s supply of masks would be enough, as long as these were used properly. The masks, according to officials, are really for people who are already ill in order to prevent others from getting sick. For healthy people, hand hygiene is far more important.

The Government also set in motion a plan to make sure that Singaporeans who fell ill would have enough masks. It began the distribution of four masks per family last Saturday (Feb 1).

But in a country where it’s a standing joke that standing in line is one of its national pastimes, there were, surprisingly, few to no queues at the distribution centres.

Some reports said that the volunteers facilitating the distribution even outnumbered those arriving to collect the masks, despite the fact that the distribution started on a weekend.

Mr Darryl David, Member of Parliament for Ang Mo Kio GRC, in a Facebook post on Tuesday (Feb 4) highlighted how members in his community club were “serving around the clock” to “actively distribute masks to residents as part of our nation’s efforts in fending against the novel coronavirus”.

FB screengrab/ Darryl David

Meanwhile, The Redwire Times quotes a member of the People’s Association staff at Woodlands Zone 1 RC as saying that only 10 per cent of residents had collected their masks.

Writing for the social-political site, Ronald Wong asked: “What’s going on, and who’s snapping up all those cost-money face masks when few even care about getting free ones?

“Could it be that a small population of Singaporeans is just more kan cheong (anxious) than others?

“Has the government over-reacted and wasted all the effort of those poor NS boys in the packing room?”

There could be a number of reasons why there are no long lines at government distribution points.

For one, it’s possible that many Singaporeans have stocked up on the masks. They may have been part of the long queues in the early days of the outbreak and already have boxes of them at home. Since the government distribution was scheduled after people started storing up on masks, this is a plausible explanation.

Secondly, the distribution period is spread out over several hours and so it’s possible for people not to have to line up to collect the masks.

Therefore, the impression that people may not be queuing for masks may just be that, an impression, or may be because of some valid reasons.

Former Nominated Member of Parliament (NMP) Calvin Cheng similarly wrote that he hardly sees anyone wearing masks on the streets, but much noise has been made online that there is a shortage of surgical and other masks, which people have used to prevent getting sick. On the other hand, there seem to be no lines forming when the government gives away surgical masks for free.

This has caused him to ask: “Are we living in alternate realities?”

A number of netizens answered that it was possible people thought that four masks were simply too few to bother collecting. After all, the health authorities have said that the masks should be changed after each use. Others say they believe that since there has been no community spread yet, people feel there is no need to wear the mask. Yet others pointed out that distribution simply hasn’t started in all communities yet.

Whatever the reason, for Singaporeans not lining up remains a mystery for some. /TISG

Read related: Calvin Cheng: Are we living in alternate realities?

Calvin Cheng: Are we living in alternate realities?

 

 

POFMA should only be for clear cut cases of falsehoods, not for interpretations of statistical data, says SDP

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Photo: Chee Soon Juan, John Tan

Secretary-General of the Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) Dr Chee Soon Juan and Vice-Chairman John Tan both took to social media reiterating the arguments they presented in court despite an unfavourable ruling.

On Wednesday (Feb 5), the High Court dismissed the SDP’s appeal to set aside Correction Directions issued against it under the Protection from Online Falsehoods and Manipulation Act (Pofma).

Calling the party’s statements “false in the face of the statistical evidence against them”, Justice Ang Cheng Hock, said that it had not challenged the accuracy of the Ministry of Manpower’s (MOM) statistics, but instead “sought to critique it on other grounds” that he did not find convincing.

Despite this ruling, both Secretary-General and Vice-Chairman took to social media to comment.

In his Facebook post on that day, Dr Chee wrote: “We are, of course, very disappointed with the verdict”.

He added: “We note, however, that the Judge had written that the role of the court in this context is to interpret the legislation and “In that sense, the Court is constrained by what the legislation compels.”

We also note that the Judge had pointed out that “Unlike the Minister, who is able to rely on the machinery of the state to procure the relevant evidence of falsity, the maker of a statement often has to contend with far more limited resources”.

Not backing down, Dr Chee wrote: “We reiterate our case which we argued in Court: POFMA must only be applied to clear cut cases of falsehoods, not for interpretations of statistical data”.

He also concluded his Facebook post stating that the party was considering appealing the decision.

Similarly, in another Facebook post, Mr Tan wrote that he “studied statistics for about 10 years and taught it for another 20 years. But the judge, who is not trained in statistics (he might have taken a course or two while in school), can simply dismiss my arguments as “false in the face of statistical evidence.””

He added: “I should have studied law… because then, you can judge anything under the sun, including a complex subject such as statistics, even if you haven’t studied it”.

What initially happened

On Dec 2, the SDP published a sponsored Facebook post with a graphic showing plunging local PMET employment.

Refuting the SDP’s statement that local PMET retrenchment was rising, the Ministry of Manpower said the number of retrenched local PMETs had declined since 2015. It also said that the graphic the SDP published was wrong and that the ministry’s Comprehensive Labour Force Survey showed that local PMET employment had risen steadily since 2015.

On Dec 16, while the SDP complied with the Pofma Correction Directions and posted correction notices on its article and earlier Facebook posts, it said that the conclusions that Manpower Minister Josephine Teo had come to were “disputable”.

On Jan 3, the SDP applied to the ministry to have the corrections cancelled, which Mrs Teo rejected.

The SDP then filed its court challenge on Jan 8. /TISG

Read related: Judge dismisses SDP’s Pofma appeal relating to local PMET employment statistics

Thai minister says kick out ‘Western’ tourists not wearing face masks

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Facebook screengrab: Aristegui Noticias

Thailand’s health minister lashed out at “Western” tourists on Friday for not wearing face masks and suggested they be expelled from the country for putting others at risk during the coronavirus outbreak.

The outburst came as the kingdom faced steep losses over a drop in visitors from China, where the virus has killed more than 600 people and prompted sweeping travel restrictions.

Tourism accounts for 18 percent of the country’s gross domestic product and Chinese holidaymakers make up a quarter of total arrivals.

Thailand has detected 25 coronavirus cases and nine of those patients have recovered, while streets, public transport and shopping centres have filled with people wearing face masks.

Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul was distributing masks at a busy Bangkok skytrain entrance when he complained that “farang” tourists didn’t take them and acted as if they “don’t care”.

Farang is a commonly used Thai word to describe Westerners and is sometimes used dismissively.

“These kinds of people, we should kick them out of Thailand,” he told reporters, waving a handful of masks in the air.

Anutin did not respond to additional requests for comment but posted an apology on his Facebook page for “losing it” after “some foreigners from Europe” were uncooperative in the mask campaign.

More than 10 million Chinese tourists visited Thailand last year but the industry projects about two million fewer arrivals in 2020 because of the coronavirus, making US, European and other markets more vital.

Debates over the efficacy of masks have bounced around the internet since the contagion first emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan last month.

Since then it has spread to more than two dozen countries and infected tens of thousands, mostly within mainland China.

Health experts generally agree masks are useful if you have respiratory symptoms or are caring for patients.

But the World Health Organization’s own Thailand office tweeted a graphic on February 4 stating masks are “not needed for general public who do not have respiratory symptoms”.

The WHO has advised people to wash their hands regularly and avoid touching their face.

ask/joe/mtp

© Agence France-Presse

/AFP

Death of Chinese doctor fuels anger, demands for change

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Screengrab: Weibo

by Jing Xuan TENG

The death of a whistleblowing doctor whose early warnings about China’s new coronavirus outbreak were suppressed by the police has unleashed a wave of anger at the government’s handling of the crisis — and bold demands for more freedom.

Ophthalmologist Li Wenliang was among a group of people who sounded the alarm about the virus in late December, only to be reprimanded and censored by the authorities in central Hubei province.

After Li’s death was confirmed early Friday, the 34-year-old was lionised as a hero on social media, while officials were vilified for letting the epidemic spiral into a national health crisis instead of listening to the doctor.

But many also used the occasion to demand more liberties in the Communist Party-ruled country, with the hashtags “I want freedom of speech” and “we demand freedom of speech” appearing on Twitter-like Weibo before being censored.

“Chinese people are only allowed one kind of freedom, and that is the freedom given by the country and the Communist Party,” commented one Weibo user.

“But clearly it is us who should be the masters of this country’s laws.”

Local authorities in Hubei and its capital Wuhan, the city at the epicentre of the crisis, had already faced rare, uncensored criticism online in recent weeks for initially downplaying the magnitude of the outbreak.

While the World Health Organization and some experts have heaped praise on China, saying it took decisive steps to try to contain the virus, critics say precious time was lost by the early inaction of the local government.

Hubei and Wuhan officials held key political meetings in the first weeks of January. The death toll and number of cases only began to soar afterwards, going from one fatality on January 11 to more than 630 barely four weeks later.

Li, who was diagnosed with the virus on February 1, said in a Weibo post in late January that local police had forced him to sign a statement agreeing not to commit any more “law-breaking actions”.

He said police had summoned him after he had seen test results from some patients suggesting SARS in December, and decided to remind his colleagues in a group chat to take stronger precaution measures.

After the Wuhan Central Hospital confirmed on Weibo early Friday that Li had joined the growing number of victims, mourners left hundreds of thousands of eulogies.

“Everything in the world can be suppressed except grief,” a blogger said on the Chinese website Baidu.

– ‘Strong emotions’ –
The public sadness appears to have caught the Chinese government’s usually tightly-controlled propaganda apparatus on the back foot.

State broadcaster CCTV and the Global Times tabloid had reported his death on Weibo late Thursday but they deleted their reports soon after the news became the top search item on the platform with 12 million hits.

The hospital later issued a statement saying Li was undergoing emergency treatment before confirming his death early Friday.

Dali Yang, a political science professor at the University of Chicago, said authorities likely ordered the delay to show there was an effort to save the doctor “because there was such an outpouring of emotion and they wanted to give a sense of hope”.

“Clearly, there was a effort nationally to channel these very strong emotions from across the country,” Yang told AFP.

But the government also did not want to “let it get out of hand” and instead move the grief in the direction that the leadership wants it to go, he said.

The party wants to show that only under its leadership can the country overcome the crisis, he said.

President Xi Jinping has called the fight against the virus a “people’s war”, while China’s ambassador to the United States, Cui Tiankai, on Friday described Li’s work as part of “our joint efforts fighting against” the virus.

In recent weeks, censors had allowed Weibo users to criticise Hubei officials — a move that placed attention on them instead of the central government.

China’s anti-graft agency said Friday it was sending investigators to Wuhan to look into “issues” related to Li.

After Li’s death, criticism went far beyond the anger directed at local officials, with users questioning the nature of the Communist state itself.

– ‘Don’t worry’ –
Some Weibo users used historical references, pointing to Wuhan as the birthplace of the 1911 revolution that ended thousands of years of imperial rule in China.

“The Qing dynasty has been dead for 100 years, how can there still be such bloody tragedies?” wrote one user.

By Friday morning, multiple hashtags related to freedom of speech and Li’s death had been scrubbed from Weibo’s search results.

“If they delete it, post it again. I oppose the criminalisation of speech,” wrote a Weibo user in a post that had been reshared thousands of times.

In one of his final Weibo posts, Li wrote from the intensive care unit that he was having trouble moving and breathing.

“Seeing all the support and encouragement from my online friends, my mood has become more relaxed,” Li said.

“Please don’t worry everyone, I will actively cooperate with the treatment, and fight to be discharged soon!”

tjx/lth/amj

© Agence France-Presse

/AFP

Thousands of Chinese tourists stranded in Bali after flights suspended

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Photo: YouTube screengrab, Singapore Airlines Plane

Thousands of Chinese tourists risk being stranded in Bali after the Indonesian government suspended flights to and from mainland China over fears of the deadly coronavirus outbreak.

With flights suspended Wednesday, at least 5,000 Chinese tourists are currently on the holiday island, according to Gou Haodong, the Chinese Consul General in Denpasar.

Some are hoping to secure visa extensions offered by Bali deputy governor Tjokorda Oka Artha Ardhana Sukawati.

“Many foreign tourists want to extend their vacation in Bali and it is fine,” he said.

But concerns surround delayed departures.

“We hope that Bali immigration office could facilitate Chinese tourists who have to overstay due to the policy,” Haodong said.

Some hotels had given assurances the visitors would be treated well during their extended stay, Haodong said, but he noted one establishment had “rejected Chinese tourists who have earlier checked in and entered their rooms due to panic over coronavirus”.

The number of Chinese tourists has already fallen from about 6,000 per day to just to 1,000 since the outbreak started in mid-December.

Indonesia has yet to report a confirmed case of the virus, which emerged in a Chinese market at the end of last year and has since killed almost 500 people in China and spread around the world.

Some 2.1 million Chinese visit Indonesia every year, the second largest group after Malaysia, according to tourist officials

str-hrl/ind

© Agence France-Presse

/AFP

Pangolin identified as potential link for coronavirus spread

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Photo: YouTube screengrab

The endangered pangolin may be the link that facilitated the spread of the novel coronavirus across China, Chinese scientists said Friday.

At least 31,000 people have been infected and 630 killed by the virus, which has spread to two dozen countries.

Researchers at the South China Agricultural University have identified the scaly mammal as a “potential intermediate host,” the university said in a statement, without providing further details.

The new virus, which emerged at a live animal market in central China’s Wuhan city late last year, is believed to have originated in bats, but researchers have suggested there could have been an “intermediate host” in the transmission to humans.

After testing more than 1,000 samples from wild animals, scientists from the university found the genome sequences of viruses found on pangolins to be 99 percent identical to those on coronavirus patients, the official Xinhua news agency reported Friday.

The pangolin is considered the most trafficked animal on the planet and over one million have been snatched from Asian and African forests in the past decade, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

They are destined for markets in China and Vietnam, where their scales are used in traditional medicine — despite having no medical benefits — and their meat is bought on the black market.

China in January ordered a temporary ban on the trade in wild animals until the epidemic is under control.

The country has long been accused by conservationists of tolerating a shadowy trade in endangered animals for food or as ingredients in traditional medicines.

The SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome) virus that killed hundreds of people in China and Hong Kong in 2002-03 also has been traced to wild animals, with scientists saying it likely originated in bats, later reaching humans via civets.

tjx/lth/rbu

© Agence France-Presse

/AFP