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medical protective eyewear, FILE: Police look at items seized from store suspected of trafficking wildlife in Guangde city in central China's Anhui Province.  (Anti-Poaching Special Squad via AP) The ban comes after Chinese leader Xi Jinping said earlier this month that China should “resolutely outlaw and harshly crackdown” on the illegal wildlife trade because of the public health risks it poses. Officials say some 1.5 million markets and online operators nationwide have been inspected since the outbreak began. About 3,700 have been shut down, and around 16,000 breeding sites have been cordoned off.

medical protective eyewear - Before the outbreak, it was legal in China to sell 54 species like pangolins and civets – as long as they were raised on farms. Jinfreng Zhou, of China Biodiversity, Conservation and Green Development Foundation, an environmental group in Beijing, said anything less than a total ban on all wildlife trading would fail to address the problem, given the lucrative nature of the industry. “The profit is huge … like drugs,” Jinfeng said. Others expressed doubt that such overreaching measures could work,

medical protective eyewear, Li Shuo, a senior global policy adviser with Greenpeace, told Bloomberg that the ambiguities in defining “wildlife” would make to difficult to stop people from trading and consuming products like traditional medicines and fur. ‘MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE 7’ MOVIE PRODUCTION PAUSES OVER CORONAVIRUS CONCERNS The coronavirus, or COVID-19, first emerged in China late last year. As of Thursday, some 79,570 cases have been reported, with nearly 2,500 deaths. The majority of these have taken place in mainland China.

medical protective eyewear - CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP The White House submitted a request to Congress Monday, asking for $2.5 billion in additional spending to help combat the outbreak. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

medical protective eyewear - Coronavirus cases spike in South Korea as more than 500 people are diagnosed and 5 have died from the infectious disease. The White House submitted a request to Congress on Monday for $2.5 billion in supplemental spending to help combat the global coronavirus outbreak. The request included $1.25 billion in new money, with the rest coming from unspent funds. The measure would help the federal government, as well as state and local agencies, potentially prepare to respond to an outbreak and allocate cash for vaccine development, a senior administration official told Fox Business.