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Home News Chinese Markets Reopen But They are Still Selling Bats, Cats and Dogs

Chinese Markets Reopen But They are Still Selling Bats, Cats and Dogs

Chinese markets are still selling live animals that recently reopened after China just declared defeated coronavirus from the country.

Metal cages full of dogs and cats awaiting slaughter and the insanitary groundwork of animals is again allegedly a common view in Chinese food markets, frequently called wet-markets, conferring to in-country journalists with the Daily Mail.

Chinese authorities ordered that the country’s wet-markets would shut down back in January 2020, after pieces of evidence arisen signifying that coronavirus was first transferred to people via bats and other live animals sold in the frequently dirty spaces of business, reported by Business Insider.

Though, now that China declares it’s crushed the COVID-19 virus, the Chinese markets appear to have restarted trade as usual.

The marketplaces have gone back to functioning in accurately the similar way as they did before COVID-19

Daily Mail Reporter

Daily Mail columnist who witnessed the shops re-opening Dongguan, also said, “The only change is that security officials try to stop anybody capturing pictures this thing has never happened here before.”

Another columnist in Guilin, China which is a city in southwest snapped a sign promoting bats, spiders, lizards, snakes, and scorpions for sale as medicines for common diseases.

Pictures have also started to go viral on social media of old-style Chinese foods reflected odd by Western values for sale in the freshly renewed wet markets. Jim Cramer, CNBC host tweeted a video of live scorpions for sale.

While China declares it’s crushed COVID-19, many are doubtful about how authentic the decision the Chinese Communist Party has been in reporting Coronavirus statistics during the pandemic.

National Review declares it has recognized lots of examples in which China lied to the world about the coronavirus in its boundaries.

China has logged 82,342 coronavirus cases, conferring to Our World In Data. The earliest case appeared in Wuhan, China in November, reports LiveScience.

Cover photo by Natalie Ng for Digital Phablet