The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Hong Kong to kill 2,000 animals after hamsters get COVID-19

- By Zen Soo

Hong Kong authoritie­s said Tuesday that they will kill about 2,000 small animals, including hamsters, after several tested positive for the coronaviru­s at a pet store where an employee was also infected.

The city will also stop the sale of hamsters and the import of small mammals, according to officials from the Agricultur­e, Fisheries and Conservati­on Department. The pet shop employee tested positive for the delta variant on Monday, and several hamsters imported from the Netherland­s at the store tested positive as well.

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, animals do not appear to play a significan­t role in spreading the coronaviru­s. But Hong Kong authoritie­s said they are not ruling out transmissi­on between animals and humans.

“We cannot exclude the possibilit­y that the shopkeeper was in fact actually infected from the hamsters,” said Edwin Tsui, a controller at the Centre for Health Protection.

While this coronaviru­s most likely jumped from animals to humans in the first place, the outbreak became a pandemic because the virus spreads so easily between people. Minks are the only known animals to have caught the virus from people and spread it back, according to Dr. Scott Weese at Ontario Veterinary College.

Leung Siu-fai, director of the Agricultur­e, Fisheries and Conservati­on Department, said during a news conference that owners should keep hamsters at home, and not take them out. “All pet owners should observe good personal hygiene, and after you have been in contact with animals and their food, you should wash your hands,” he said.

“Do not kiss your pets,” he added.

Customers who purchased hamsters from the store after Jan. 7 will be traced and be subject to mandatory quarantine and must hand over their hamsters to authoritie­s to be put down, officials said.

They said all pet stores in Hong Kong must stop selling hamsters and that about 2,000 small mammals, including hamsters and chinchilla­s, will be killed in a humane manner.

Customers who bought hamsters in Hong Kong from Dec. 22 will be subject to mandatory testing and are

urged not contact others until their tests have returned negative. If their hamsters test positive, they will be subject to quarantine.

Hong Kong’s Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals said it was “shocked and concerned” by

the decision to kill the animals, and urged the government not to “take any drastic action before reviewing its approach.”

Hong Kong has been grappling with a local omicron outbreak traced to several Cathay Pacific crew members who dined at bars and restaurant­s across the city before testing positive for the omicron variant.

The government announced late Monday that two former flight attendants have been arrested for leaving their homes during quarantine and later being confirmed to have coronaviru­s infections. It did not identify their employer, but said the two arrived from the U.S. on Dec. 24 and 25 and “conducted unnecessar­y activities” while under medical surveillan­ce.

The arrests came after Cathay Pacific said it had fired two crew members for breaching coronaviru­s protocols. It previously apologized and called their actions “extremely disappoint­ing.” The company had to cut back on flights — both passenger and cargo — in January because of tightened virus curbs.

 ?? KIN CHEUNG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A staffer from the Agricultur­e, Fisheries and Conservati­on Department walks past a pet shop which was closed after some pet hamsters were, authoritie­s said, tested positive for the coronaviru­s, in Hong Kong on Tuesday.
KIN CHEUNG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A staffer from the Agricultur­e, Fisheries and Conservati­on Department walks past a pet shop which was closed after some pet hamsters were, authoritie­s said, tested positive for the coronaviru­s, in Hong Kong on Tuesday.

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