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          Official: Wildlife should not be eaten
          ( 2003-07-28 06:51) (China Daily)

          The protection of wild animals and the health of human beings should be given equal priority in the revised version of the Wildlife Conservation Law being drafted, said a legislative official.

          It should prohibit the eating of wild animals, said Sun Youhai, an official with the Environmental and Resources Protection Committee of the National People's Congress.

          This year's legislative agenda of the Congress Standing Committee, the country's top legislative body, includes the revision of the 1988 Wildlife Conservation Law.
          "The protection of both wild animals and people's health accords with current thinking about wildlife protection in the whole of society,'' Sun said.

          Public concern over the relationship between human beings and wild animals has grown since the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS).

          Reports by some scientists in the national media suggested the potentially fatal virus was initially transmitted to humans after people ate animals such as the masked palm civet, although this has not been proved categorically.

          "The bad habit of eating wild animals not only harms the health of human beings but jeopardizes efforts to better protect wild animals,'' Sun said.

          Xu Ping, dean of the Law Department of Beijing Forestry University, said a ban on the eating of wild animals would be a great help in stemming the market and eventually stopping the poaching of wild animals.

          "Sustainable development is a solution to get out of such a dilemma but not everyone can fully understand its importance,'' Xu said.

          She said legislators should carefully seek a balance so that human beings can live in harmony with the environment.

          Poaching and the illegal selling of wild animals are still persistent problems in wildlife conservation in China, said Ma Fu, deputy director of the State Forestry Administration. Xu said all environmental laws face the dilemma of whether they should centre on human beings or stress the philosophy that all creatures are equal.
           
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