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It was New Years Eve, 2019 when health officials in China admitted they had a problem.
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Health authorities have activated their most serious response level.
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After an outbreak of a new type of viral pneumonia in central China.
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A rapidly growing number of people were developing a dry cough and fever, before getting pneumonia.
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And for some, it turned fatal.
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Doctors have named the disease COVID-19 or "coronavirus disease, 2019" indicating that a type of virus is causing the illness.
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When they'd tried to trace its origin, they found a likely source.
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This food market in Wuhan.
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Out of the first 41 patients, 27 had been here.
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It wasn't conclusive evidence, but Chinese officials quickly shut down the market.
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They had seen this happen before at a place just like this.
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Health officials are trying to get a grip on an alarming outbreak of SARS.
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The virus originated in mainland China.
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Then spread across the country.
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The disease had been festering for months in southern China.
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In 2002, a coronavirus had emerged at a very similar market in southern China.
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It eventually reached 29 countries and killed nearly 800 people.
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Now, 18 years later, this coronavirus is in at least 71 countries and has already killed over 3100 people.
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So, what do these markets have to do with the coronavirus outbreak and why is it happening in China?
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Vox atlas.
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A lot of the viruses that make us sick, actually originate in animals.
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Some of the viruses that cause the flu come from birds and pigs.
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HIV/AIDS comes from chimpanzees.
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The deadly Ebola virus likely originates in bats.
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And in the case of the 2019 coronavirus, there is some evidence it went from a bat to a pangolin before infecting a human.
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While viruses are very good at jumping between species, it's rare for a deadly one to make this journey all the way to humans.
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Thats because it would need all these hosts to encounter each other at some point.
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That's where the Wuhan market comes in.
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It's a wet market.
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A kind of place where live animals are slaughtered and sold for consumption.
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It was not a surprise at all.
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And I think that it was not a surprise to many scientists.
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Peter Li is a professor and expert on China's animal trade.
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The cages are stacked one over another.
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Animals at the bottom are often soaked with all kinds of liquid.
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Animal excrement, pus, blood.
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Whatever the liquid they are receiving from the animals above.
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That's exactly how a virus can jump from one animal to another.
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If that animal then comes in contact with or is consumed by a human, the virus could potentially infect them.
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And if the virus then spreads to other humans, it causes an outbreak.
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Wet markets are scattered all over the world, but the ones in China are particularly well known because they offer a wide variety of animals, including wildlife.
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This is a sample menu, reportedly from the market in Wuhan.
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These animals are from all over the world and each one has the potential to carry its own viruses to the market.
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The reason all these animals are in the same market is because of a decision China's government made decades ago.
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Back in the 1970s, China was falling apart.
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Famine had killed more than 36 million people.
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And the communist regime, which controlled all food production, was failing to feed its more than 900 million people.
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In 1978, on the verge of collapse, the regime gave up this control and allowed private farming.
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While large companies increasingly dominated the production of popular foods like pork and poultry, some smaller farmers turned to catching and raising wild animals as a way to sustain themselves.
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At the very beginning, it was mostly peasant household, backyard operations of turtles, for example.
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That's how wildlife farming started to get off the ground.
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And since it started to feed and sustain people, the Chinese government backed it.
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So it was imperative for the government to encourage people, you know, to make a living through whatever productive activities they can find themselves in.
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If you can lift yourself out of poverty, no matter what you are doing, that's okay.
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But then in 1988, the government made a decision that changed the shape of wildlife trade in China.
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They enacted the Wildlife Protection Law which designated the animals as "resources owned by the state" and protected people engaged in the "utilization of wildlife resources."
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That's one of the most devastating problems of the law.
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Because if you designate the wildlife as "natural resources," that means it's something you can use for human benefit.
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The law also "encouraged the domestication and breeding of wildlife."
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And with that, an industry was born.
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Small local farms turned into industrial-sized operations.
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For example, this bear farm started with just three, and eventually grew to more than 1,000 bears.
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Bigger populations meant greater chances that a sick animal could spread disease.
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Farmers were also raising a wide variety of animals.
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Which meant more viruses on the farms.
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Nonetheless, these animals were funneled into the wet markets for profit.
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While this legal wildlife farming industry started booming, it simultaneously provided cover for an illegal wildlife industry.
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Endangered animals like tigers, rhinoceroses, and pangolins, were trafficked into China.
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By the early 2000s, these markets were teeming with wild animals when the inevitable happened.
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The latest on the deadly SARS virus, the worldwide death toll up again today.
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China has reported more than 1,400 cases of infection nationwide.
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It is what health officials have feared all along.
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In 2003, the SARS outbreak was traced to a wet market here, in southern China.
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Scientists found traces of the virus in farmed civet cats.
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Chinese officials quickly shut down the markets and banned wildlife farming.
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But just a few months after the outbreak, the Chinese government declared 54 species of wildlife animals, including civet cats, legal to farm again.
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By 2004, the wildlife-farming industry was worth an estimated 100 billion yuan.
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And it exerted significant influence over the Chinese government.
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The wildlife farming industry was tiny in China's gigantic GDP.
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But the industry has enormous lobbying capability.
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It's because of this influence that the Chinese government has allowed these markets to grow over the years.
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In 2016, for example, the government sanctioned the farming of some endangered species like tigers, and pangolins.
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By 2018, the wildlife industry had grown to 148 billion yuan and had developed clever marketing tactics to keep the markets around.
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The industry has been promoting these wildlife animals as tonic products, as bodybuilding, as sex enhancing, and, of course, as disease fighting.
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None of the claims can hold water.
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Yet, these products became popular with an influential portion of China's population.
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The majority of the people in China do not eat wildlife animals.
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Those people who consume these wildlife animals are the rich and the powerful.
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A small minority
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It's this minority that the Chinese government chose to favor over the safety of the rest of its population.
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This parochial commercial interest of a small number of wildlife eaters are hijacking China's national interest.
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Soon after the coronavirus outbreak, the Chinese government shut down thousands of wet markets and temporarily banned wildlife trade again.
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Organizations around the world have been urging China to make the ban permanent.
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Chinese social media, in particular, has been flooded with petitions to ban it for good this time.
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In response, China is reportedly amending the Wildlife Protection Law that encouraged wildlife farming decades ago.
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But unless these actions lead to a permanent ban on wildlife farming, outbreaks like this one are bound to happen again.
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For a bunch more information about China's wet-markets, viruses, and wildlife, we have an episode on our Netflix show called ”The Next Pandemic, explained."
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It talks about why a coronavirus could spark the next pandemic and what the world's experts are doing to stop it.
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That's on our Netflix show Explained, check it out.