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BBC China Sars man 'never ate civet'

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>

>BBC DAILY E-MAIL: UK EDITION

>Wednesday, 07 January, 2004, 09:00 GMT 01:00 US/Pacific

>

>

> * China Sars man 'never ate civet' *

>The man at the centre of the Sars scare says he

>has never eaten the animal now being slaughtered

>by health officials.

>Full story:

>http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/em/-/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/3374643.stm

>

China Sars man 'never ate civet'

By Louisa Lim

BBC correspondent in Beijing

 

China's latest Sars patient says he has never

eaten a civet cat, as the authorities in the

southern province of Guangdong continue to

slaughter thousands of the animals as an

anti-Sars measure.

 

 

 

CIVET CAT

Part of mongoose family, distant relative of feline cat

Weasel-like face, cat-like body

Served in wild game restaurants

Estimated 10,000 in Guangdong markets

May have been the source of the virus which jumped to humans

 

 

The first Sars patient since the epidemic was

announced under control in July, he described

himself as an environmentalist who was against

the slaughter of living creatures.

 

But the authorities in Guangdong now say that

they will launch a rat extermination campaign

after they have finished killing the civets.

 

In his first interview, the Sars patient told the

Xinhua news agency he had never even seen a

civet, let alone eaten one.

 

Tests had shown his virus was similar to one

found in civets, prompting the government's

decision to slaughter about 10,000 of the animals.

 

It is still not known how the man, Mr Luo, caught

the disease, though there has been speculation

that rats might have played a role.

 

In the interview, Mr Luo tells how he caught a

baby mouse in the bath tub using a pair of

chopsticks.

 

He describes himself as an environmentalist who

is against the slaughter of living creatures, so

he said he threw the animal out of the window.

 

International experts have said there is no

conclusive published evidence to show that

civets, mice or rats have the Sars virus.

 

Nonetheless, this has not stopped the health

authorities in the southern city of Guangzhou

announcing a rat extermination campaign.

 

That is to start on Saturday after the civet cull is finished.

 

One newspaper said the whole city would unite to

kill rats, not leaving out a single household.

Story from BBC NEWS:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/3374643.stm

 

Published: 2004/01/07 07:01:25 GMT

 

© BBC MMIV

 

--

 

 

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