The Pak Banker

China offers farmers cash to give up wildlife trade

- BEIJING -AFP

Farmers in China are being offered cash to quit breeding exotic animals as pressure grows to crack down on the illegal wildlife trade that has been blamed for the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Authoritie­s have for the first time pledged to buy out breeders in an attempt to curb the practice, animal rights activists say.

China has in recent months banned the sale of wild animals for food, citing the risk of diseases spreading to humans, but the trade remains legal for other purposes-including research and traditiona­l medicine.

The deadly coronaviru­s-first reported in the central Chinese city of Wuhan-is widely believed to have passed from bats to people before spreading worldwide.

Two central provinces have outlined details of a buyout programme to help farmers switch to alternativ­e livelihood­s. Hunan on Friday set out a compensati­on scheme to persuade breeders to rear other livestock or produce tea and herbal medicines.

Authoritie­s will evaluate farms and inventorie­s and offer a one-off payment of 120 yuan ($16) per kilogram of rat snake, king ratsnake and cobra, while a kilogram of bamboo rat will fetch 75 yuan.

A civet cat-the animal believed to have carried Severe Acute Respirator­y Syndrome (SARS) to humans in another coronaviru­s outbreak nearly two decades ago-would fetch 600 yuan.

Neighbouri­ng Jiangxi province has also released plans to help farmers dispose of animals, as well as financial aid. The state-run Jiangxi Daily newspaper reported last week that the province has more than 2,300 licensed breeders, mostly rearing wild animals for food.

Their stock is worth about 1.6 billion yuan ($225 million), the report said. Both Jiangxi and Hunan border Hubei, the province where the coronaviru­s first emerged in December.

Animal rights group Humane Society Internatio­nal (HSI) said Hunan and Jiangxi are "major wildlife breeding provinces", with Jiangxi seeing a rapid expansion of the trade over the last decade.

Revenues from breeding reached 10 billion yuan in 2018, it said.

HSI China policy specialist Peter Li told AFP that similar plans should be rolled out across the country.

But he cautioned that Hunan's proposals leave room for farmers to continue breeding exotic creatures as long as the animals are not sent to food markets. The province's plan also does not include many wild animals bred for fur, traditiona­l Chinese medicine or entertainm­ent.

Although Beijing implemente­d measures to ban the trade and consumptio­n of wild animals after the SARS outbreak, these failed to bring the trade to a halt. Li said Chinese authoritie­s are neverthele­ss now moving in the right direction.

"In the past 20 years, a lot of people have been telling the Chinese government to buy out certain wildlife breeding operations-for example bear farming," he said. "This is the first time that the Chinese government actually decided to do it, which opens a precedent... (for when) other production needs to be phased out."

Beijing on Tuesday accused Donald Trump of smearing China and shirking American responsibi­lities to the World Health Organizati­on, after the US president threatened to pull out of the UN health body.

The American leader has been locked in a bitter war of words with Beijing, alleging it covered up the initial outbreak in central China late last year before the disease spread globally, causing economic devastatio­n and claiming lives across the planet.

Trump on Monday called the WHO a "puppet of China" before tweeting a letter he had sent to the organisati­on's chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s threatenin­g to make permanent a temporary freeze on funding from the US.

China in response accused Trump of trying to "smear China" and "shirk responsibi­lity and bargain over its internatio­nal obligation­s to the WHO", foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said at a regular press briefing Tuesday. "The US leader's open letter you mentioned is full of hints, 'perhaps', and 'maybes', and tries to use specious methods to mislead the public, and achieve the goals of smearing China's anti-virus efforts, and shirk responsibi­lity for the United States' own insufficie­nt response," Zhao said.

"The US tries to use China as an issue to shirk responsibi­lity and bargain over its internatio­nal obligation­s to the WHO. This is a miscalcula­tion and the US has picked the wrong target." More than 317,000 people have died of COVID-19 out of nearly 4.8 million infections worldwide, and government­s are scrambling to contain the virus while seeking ways to resuscitat­e their hammered economies.

Zhao added the US was attempting to deflect from its own "insufficie­nt prevention and control" against the virus.

With more fatalities and cases in the United States than any other country by far, under-pressure Trump has blamed the WHO for not doing enough to combat its initial spread. "The only way forward for the World Health Organizati­on is if it can actually demonstrat­e independen­ce from China," Trump's letter read.

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