Australia urges G20 action on wildlife wet markets

Australia urges G20 action on wildlife wet markets

The Australian government on Thursday called on the G20 countries to take action on wildlife wet markets, calling them a “biosecurity and human health risk”. However, Agriculture Minister David Littleproud said he was not targeting all food markets. “A wet market, like the Sydney fish market, is perfectly safe,” the BBC quoted the Minister as saying to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation on Thursday morning. “But when you add wildlife, live wildlife, exotic wildlife - that opens up human risk and biosecurity risk to the extent we have seen. “And in fact, China themselves reported this to the World Organisation for Animal Health, that that was the cause of COVID-19.” Littleproud said he wanted to “get the science” first, but said: “Even our chief veterinary officer is telling us that he believes they (wildlife wet markets) may need to be phased out.” “Wet markets” are marketplaces that sell fresh food such as meat and fish, the BBC reported. (IANS)

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