Animals are not ours to experiment on, eat, wear, use for entertainment, or abuse in any other way.

URGENT: Help Shut Down Live-Animal Markets That Breed Deadly Diseases

Update: April 13, 2021

The first domino has fallen! Since the start of the pandemic, PETA has pushed the World Health Organization (WHO) to call for the closure of live-animal markets worldwide. Well, it’s now happening: WHO is urging countries to suspend the sale of live mammalian wild animals in food markets as an emergency measure, saying that wild animals are a leading cause of emerging infectious diseases like COVID-19. We told you that a year ago!

This is a good start but does nothing to stop frogs, snakes, chickens, and others from being sold, even though confining and killing them in filthy live-animal markets also contributes to the spread of disease. As long as live-animal markets remain open and any animal is sold, intelligent and sensitive beings will continue to suffer and humans will be at enormous risk.

Thank you to everyone who took action below – please keep going: share this alert with your friends and family and anyone else you know until WHO calls for the closure of all live-animal markets.

Live-animal markets exist across Asia selling live and dead animals—often of a variety of species—as 'pets' and for human consumption, and it is believed to the be environment in which the novel coronavirus broke out. SARS is a coronavirus that's believed to have first infected humans at a Chinese live-animal market, just like COVID-19. 

African Swine Fever, avian flu, swine flu, SARS, HIV, Ebola, and other diseases are linked to live-animal markets, meat production or consumption. Not all of these come from live-animal markets—but such markets, where stressed, injured, and sick animals are commonly caged in public areas, are perfect breeding grounds for diseases. In this video, Peter Li, an associate professor at the University of Houston–Downtown, states that at live-animal markets, "The cages are stacked one over another. Animals at the bottom are often soaked with all kinds of liquid. Animal excrement, pus, blood." Such conditions allow viruses to spread from one animal to another as well as to humans who come into contact with them.

 

© Jo-Anne McArthur / We Animals

Although the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market in Wuhan, China, where the coronavirus is thought to have first infected humans, has closed and that country has banned the consumption and farming of "wild" animals (hopefully, not only temporarily), it's important to note that diseases don't just affect animals humans have labelled as "wild." Many wet markets continue to operate throughout Asia, Africa, Europe, and the U.S.

Just as we don't want to be infected with or die from COVID-19, other animals don't want to suffer or be killed for food. A hen, for example, just wants to be left in peace so that she can teach calls to her chicks before they hatch (much like how a human mother talks to her baby in the womb) and teach her young the ways of the world once they're born. And fish just want to be left alone so that they can protect their young, build nests, and swim freely.

© Jo-Anne McArthur / We Animals

No matter what species they are peddling, live-animal markets will continue to put the human population at risk as well as sentencing countless animals to a miserable death.

Join PETA in urging the World Health Organization to call for an end to all deadly live-animal markets around the globe.

-
Dr. Tedros Adhanom
Ghebre
World Health Organization

Take Action Now

Fields with an asterisk(*) are required.​

Sign up for e-mail including:

By signing up here and giving us your contact details, you're acknowledging that you've read and you agree to our privacy policy. Current subscribers: You will continue to receive e-mails unless you explicitly opt out here.