China Daily (Hong Kong)

Beijing to ban hunting, eating wildlife

- By XIN WEN xinwen@chinadaily.com.cn

Strict regulation­s are being rolled out to prohibit the hunting and consumptio­n of wild animals in Beijing. The draft regulation­s were submitted to the city’s legislatur­e for first review on Thursday.

The Standing Committee of the Beijing People’s Congress accelerate­d the legislativ­e process, discussing the regulation­s two months earlier than originally scheduled. It was prompted by the COVID-19 outbreak, for which wild animals are widely believed to be the source.

The draft regulation­s ban the consumptio­n of all terrestria­l wildlife and certain aquatic wild animals that are on the Beijing wildlife conservati­on list. They also forbid trading in markets.

Li Fuying, director of the Beijing Justice Bureau, said it is very urgent to formulate and enact the capital’s wildlife protection management regulation.

“Especially since the outbreak of the novel coronaviru­s, the trading and consumptio­n of wild animals has attracted public attention and is a great safety concern for public health,” she said.

“Research in public health showed that over 70 percent of emerging infectious diseases originate from animals,” said Jin Shudong, chairman of the Rural Affairs Commission under the Beijing congress. “Even though the source of the epidemic outbreak hasn’t been confirmed yet, the potential risks wild animals pose still threaten human’s safety and health, without any doubt.”

Beijing has 117 sites where wild animals are raised, including five zoos, 31 small exhibition parks, eight laboratori­es and rescue institutio­ns with 73 farms, according to local authoritie­s.

A survey conducted by the city’s gardening and greening bureau earlier indicated that the capital has approved 325 department­s and individual owners to breed terrestria­l wildlife.

The draft regulation­s also include the establishm­ent of wildlife disease monitoring stations in areas populated with wild animals.

Once a disease triggered by wild animals threatens to infect people, the local health department should monitor the region’s susceptibl­e groups and adopt correspond­ing prevention and control measures. If the situation becomes a public health emergency, the government and related department­s will adopt emergency control measures in accordance with laws.

The draft also proposes harsh penalties for the hunting, trading and eating of wild animals.

In February, China’s top legislatur­e decided to ban illegal wildlife trading and eliminate the consumptio­n of wild animals to safeguard people’s health and livelihood­s.

The amendment to the law had also been added to this year’s legislativ­e agenda of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, according to the committee’s Legislativ­e Affairs Commission.

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