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World-renowned primatologist Jane Goodall pleaded pleaded for humanity to learn from past mistakes (AFP Photo/Fabrice COFFRINI) |
Paris (AFP) - World-renowned British
primatologist Jane Goodall says the coronavirus pandemic was caused by
humanity's disregard for nature and disrespect for animals.
Goodall,
who is best known for trail-blazing research in Africa that revealed
the true nature of chimpanzees, pleaded for the world to learn from past
mistakes to prevent future disasters.
During a conference call
ahead of the release of the new National Geographic documentary "Jane
Goodall: The Hope", the 86-year-old also said everyone can make a
difference.
- How do you view this pandemic? -
Goodall: It
is our disregard for nature and our disrespect of the animals we should
share the planet with that has caused this pandemic, that was predicted
long ago.
Because as we destroy, let's say the forest, the
different species of animals in the forest are forced into a proximity
and therefore diseases are being passed from one animal to another, and
that second animal is then most likely to infect humans as it is forced
into closer contact with humans.
It's also the animals who are
hunted for food, sold in markets in Africa or in the meat market for
wild animals in Asia, especially China, and our intensive farms where we
cruelly crowd together billions of animals around the world. These are
the conditions that create an opportunity for the viruses to jump from
animals across the species barrier to humans.
- What can we do about these animal markets? -
It's
really good that China closed down the live wild animal markets, in a
temporary ban which we hope will be made permanent, and other Asian
countries will follow suit.
But in Africa it will be very
difficult to stop the selling of bush meat because so many people rely
on that for their livelihoods.
It will need a lot of careful
thought on how it should be done, you can't just stop somebody doing
something when they have absolutely no money to support themselves or
their families, but at least this pandemic should have taught us the
kind of things to do to prevent another one.
- What can we hope for? -
We
have to realise we are part of the natural world, we depend on it, and
as we destroy it we are actually stealing the future from our children.
Hopefully,
because of this unprecedented response, the lockdowns that are going on
around the world, more people will wake up and eventually they can
start thinking about ways they can live their lives differently.
Everyone can make an impact every single day.
If
you think about the consequences of the little choices you make: what
you eat, where it came from, did it cause cruelty to animals, is it made
from intensive farming -- which mostly it is -- is it cheap because of
child slave labour, did it harm the environment in its production, where
did it come from, how many miles did it travel, did you think that
perhaps you could walk and not take your car.
(Also consider) ways
that you could perhaps help alleviate poverty because when people are
poor they can't make these ethical choices. They just have to do
whatever they can to survive -- they can't question what they buy, they
must buy the cheapest, and they are going to cut down the last tree
because they are desperate to find land on which they can grow more
food.
So what we can do in our individual lives does depend a
little bit on who we are, but we all can make a difference, everybody
can.
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