DR Ibrahim Goni, the Conservator-General, National Park Service has called on the public to reduce excessive closeness and interaction with wildlife in order to curb some avoidable diseases including COVID-19.
Goni made the call in a statement made available to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Tuesday in Abuja.
He said there was a clear associated with poaching, eating and trading in wildlife to contracting diseases, adding that caution must also be henceforth taken against using wild animals as pets.
“We got reports that people still eat and sell various species of dead monkeys, cats, and birds such as bats, pangolins suspected to be at the center of COVID-19.
“Pangolin, the world’s most trafficked mammal is believed to have possibly been a vector in the leap of the novel coronavirus from animal to human at a market in China’s Wuhan City last year.
“They are commonly used in traditional Chinese medicine, although scientists revealed that they have no therapeutic value,’’ he said.
The conservator-general also said the COVID-19 pandemic should make hunters of wildlife begin to consider the health of humans, animals and the environment to avert future crisis.
“Due to hunting, eating and trading in wildlife, the world has seen the emergence of all sorts of animal-borne infectious diseases such as SARS, Nipah, Ebola, Lassa fever, and now COVID-19.
“COVID-19 pandemic has wreaked havoc globally and Nigeria is not left out and I wonder why some people still engage in a trade that has supposedly brought such devastation upon mankind.
“One of the frightening realities of this trade is the threat that it poses to the health of human beings through spread of diseases from animals to human beings.
“Wildlife belongs to the wild and therefore should be left in the wild.
“At our parks, we have experts who handle these animals in hygienic ways to avoid direct human contact that can become breeding grounds for existing and emerging infectious diseases,” Goni said.
Goni, therefore, urged the public to adhere to the country’s Environmental Laws and the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES).
“It is important we understand the links between habitat and environmental damage and the coronavirus.
“The destruction of ecosystems makes disease outbreaks including pandemics more likely and now the destruction of nature is the underlying crisis behind the coronavirus crisis.
“Our wildlife is increasingly going into extinction and its trade puts ecosystems at risk,” he said.
The conservator-general explained that the service would continue to create awareness on the negative impact of hunting and trading on biodiversity and the risks it posed to human health.
“We urge those involved in wildlife trade to stop the killing and eating of wildlife for their own good.
“Wild animals belong in the wild and are not pets and should be handled by professionals only,” he said.
Goni said human lockdown had brought to bear how animals felt in captivity, in zoos or as pets in cages in houses.
According to him, the prevailing lockdown brings to fore the importance of freedom for all living things including animals in their natural habitat.
YOU SHOULD NOT MISS THESE HEADLINES FROM NIGERIAN TRIBUNE
Buy and read digital replicas of your TRIBUNE titles by subscribing through E-VENDING
COVID-19: Don’t Relax Too Soon, We’re Not Out Of The Woods Yet, Adeboye Warns
With positive cases of Covid-19 rising by the day across the globe, the General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Pastor Enoch Adeboye, has warned against carelessness in the… Read full story
COVID-19: China Denies Maltreatment Of Africans •Says mutual cooperation will destroy pandemic
For the second time in less than one week, the Republic of China has again restated its commitment to warm relationship with African countries. Zhao Lijian’s, its Foreign Ministry spokesperson made the remarks in a statement issued last night in Abuja, against the background of alleged discriminatory practises against… Read full story
China Imposes Restrictions On Research Into Origins Of Coronavirus
China has imposed restrictions on the publication of academic research on the origins of the novel coronavirus, according to a central government directive and online notices published by two Chinese universities, that have since been removed from the web, CNN reports… Read full story
MONDAY LINES: The Sleaze Of COVID-19
IT is not only the antiseptic smell of hospitals that should worry you in these times of coronavirus. You should also be bothered about doctors who infect you with drunken unawareness and wicked greed. They are many in Abuja, from the Villa to the ministries and agencies where COVID-19 has become big business… Read full story