The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

WHO called upon to close down all wildlife markets

World health watchdog is urged to help stop new diseases emerging

- EMILY BEAMENT

The World Health Organisati­on (WHO) should recommend government­s shut down wild animal markets to prevent future pandemics, conservati­onists have said.

More than 200 wildlife groups across the world have signed an open letter calling on WHO to do all it can to prevent new diseases emerging from the wildlife trade and spreading into global pandemics.

The evidence suggests Covid-19 has animal origins, likely from bats, and may have come from “wet markets” where live and dead creatures are sold for eating, leading to a ban on the markets by the Chinese government.

Previous global epidemics including severe acute respirator­y syndrome (Sars) and ebola have also been linked to viruses that spread from animals to people.

The letter calls on WHO to recommend to government­s worldwide that they bring in permanent bans on live wildlife markets and act to close down or limit trade in wildlife to reduce the threat to human health.

The groups also want the use of wildlife, including from captive-bred animals, to be “unequivoca­lly” excluded from the organisati­on’s definition and endorsemen­t of traditiona­l medicine.

Conservati­onists also said the WHO should work with government­s and internatio­nal bodies such as the World Trade Organisati­on to raise awareness of the risks the wildlife trade poses to human health and society.

It should also support and encourage initiative­s that deliver alternativ­e sources of protein to people who survive on eating wild animals, in order to further reduce the risk to human health.

The letter has been co-ordinated by wildlife charity Born Free and its Lion Coalition partners, and backed by organisati­ons including the Bat Conservati­on Trust, Internatio­nal Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) and the Zoological Society of London (ZSL).

Dr Mark Jones, head of policy at Born Free, said markets selling live wild animals were found in many countries but had rapidly expanded and become more commercial, increasing the risks to human and animal health.

The trade in wild animals is also a major contributo­r to global declines in wildlife and has severe consequenc­es for the welfare of millions of individual animals, he said.

He added: “We need to dig deep and reset our fundamenta­l relationsh­ip with the natural world, rethink our place in it and treat our planet and all its inhabitant­s with a great deal more respect, for its sake and for ours.

“Once Covid-19 is hopefully behind us, returning to business as usual cannot be an option.”

 ?? Picture: Shuttersto­ck. ?? A man wearing a protective face mask walks by a poster promoting the protection of wildlife.
Picture: Shuttersto­ck. A man wearing a protective face mask walks by a poster promoting the protection of wildlife.

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