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- In 1970s, China was in crisis; famine had killed over 36 million people.
- The food production was not enough to provide for the population of 900 million people.
- In 1978, the government, which was so far controlling food production, gave up control and allowed private farming.
- The bigger companies dominated the production of popular items such as pork and poultry.
- And to earn a living, small farmers began catching and selling whatever they got their hands on, including some wild animals.
- It started on a small-scale with animals such as turtles.
- Since this business was successful in feeding and sustaining people, the government encouraged it; the idea was to move people out of poverty and whatever achieved it was considered good.
- In 1988, Chinese government enacted the Wildlife Protection Law, which designated wildlife as state resource and encouraged people to domesticate and breed wildlife animals for human benefit.
- Small farmers began capturing and domesticating wild animals in big numbers.
- When sold in wet-markets (markets where live animals are slaughtered for human consumption), these wild animals generated good profits.
- Good profits meant more & different kinds of animals in domestication, thus leading to different kinds of viruses (also because the living conditions for these animals were not good).
- The profit-attraction also led to smuggling of animals to wet-markets from other countries.
- All these outbreaks are known to spread from wild animals because human bodies are not ready to handle such viruses.
- After 2002 SARS, China banned wildlife farming when the virus was found to have traveled from a species of a wild cat.
- But the ban was lifted a few months after the SARS came under control.
- The wildlife farming industry is known to have strong lobbying capabilities, thus, explaining why it wasn’t banned permanently.
- After Coronavirus outbreak, the wet-markets and wildlife farming have been banned again and the world is urging China to make the ban permanent this time.
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Image courtesy of Markus Spiske through Pexels