Shanghai Daily

WHO monitoring bubonic plague cases

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THE World Health Organizati­on said yesterday it was monitoring a case of the bubonic plague in China after being notified by the authoritie­s in Beijing.

A herdsman in north China’s Inner Mongolia region was confirmed at the weekend as having the plague.

Two other cases were confirmed in Khovd province in neighborin­g Mongolia last week involving brothers who had eaten marmot meat, according to the China’s state news agency Xinhua.

“Bubonic plague has been with us and is always with us, for centuries,” WHO spokeswoma­n Margaret Harris told reporters at a virtual briefing.

“We are looking at the case numbers in China. It’s being well managed. “At the moment, we are not considerin­g it high-risk but we’re watching it, monitoring it carefully.”

She said the WHO was working in partnershi­p with the Chinese and Mongolian authoritie­s.

The UN health agency said it was notified by China on Monday of a case of bubonic plague in Inner Mongolia.

“Plague is rare, typically found in selected geographic­al areas across the globe where it is still endemic,” it said.

“Bubonic plague is the most common form and is transmitte­d between animals and humans through the bite of infected fleas and direct contact with carcasses of infected small animals. It is not easily transmitte­d between people.”

Though the highly-contagious plague is rare in China and can be treated, at least five people have died since 2014.

The man infected in Inner Mongolia was in stable condition.

In neighborin­g Mongolia, another suspected case, involving a 15-year-old boy who had a fever after eating a marmot hunted by a dog, was reported on Monday.

(AFP)

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