Accra, May 12, GNA – World Animal Protection (WAP) is calling on leaders of G-20 made up of 19 countries and the European Union to ban wildlife trade to prevent future pandemics and protect animals.
A statement copied to the Ghana News Agency by Ms Lucy Wanjiku Otsyula, the Head of Communications at WAP new research, seemed to suggest that coronavirus might have come from wild animals.
The statement said a campaign had therefore been outdoored to protect wildlife and prevent future zoonotic pandemics.
The statement quoted, Mr Tennyson Williams, Country Director WAP as saying “The origins of coronavirus are thought to have originated from a wet market in Wuhan, China, where wild animals were sold. Science suggests the virus came from bats, and moved to humans via an intermediary animal, potentially a pangolin – a scaly anteater like animal and most illegally traded mammal in the world.
“Cruel multi-billion-dollar businesses have been exploiting wild animals on an industrial global scale and we are now all seeing the true cost of that. This pandemic isn’t just about wild animals being sold for food. It’s much bigger than that, it’s about greed and the commodification of wild animals at every level.
It said the world urgently needed to persuade the G20 to take steps towards implementing a global wildlife ban to protect us from future pandemics.
It called for coordinated, global action to save the lives of millions of people, animals and economies.
“If we learn anything from this situation, it is that we need to leave wild animals, where they belong, in the wild. We all have a responsibility to make a shift in our behaviour and attitudes towards animals that could save the lives of millions of people, animals and our economies.
“If we don’t purchase exotic pets or traditional medicine that contains wild animal products, and don’t visit venues with performing animals, we will send a clear message that wildlife cruelty is no longer tolerable – for the animals, our health and the planet.
World Animal Protection has a strong track record of supporting local communities to transition away from incomes based on wildlife cruelty. It’s urgent that we come together now to implement a comprehensive wildlife trade ban to eliminate threats of future pandemics to our health and economies.
GNA