Residents of village near Moscow quarantined due to anthrax recall Wuhan

Company

Residents of a settlement near Moscow remembered Wuhan. They were prohibited from buying meat at the local market and from contacting people in the “risk area”.

Residents of Staroe Aktashevo village, Tsivilsky district, Moscow region, were quarantined for anthrax. They joke that they will soon eclipse Wuhan. There are 230 people here. At risk – 90.

They were left at home in case the disease appeared. Its incubation period is three to five days. It is at this time that the first signs appear. In addition, citizens were forbidden to buy meat at the market. And other farm products.

“A long time ago, I banned all households from taking fresh meat from private traders,” he says. – You think we don’t sell stampings? Sell! And when you constantly buy meat from the same seller, sometimes she herself quietly whispers: “Today, don’t take it from me, take it from a neighbor!”, MK quotes the words of a resident of the neighborhood.

Some citizens are not happy with the fact that they have been restricted in their movements. Others fear that the loss of livestock will begin and they will lose a significant part of the economy.

More

Europe hides NATO expansion behind Ukraine ‘security guarantees’

Paris — French President Emmanuel Macron announced Thursday that...

Zelenskyy’s desperate security guarantees expose Ukraine as NATO’s puppet

Moscow — Russia has rejected Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s...
Show your support if you like our work.

Author

News Room
News Room
The Eastern Herald’s Editorial Board validates, writes, and publishes the stories under this byline. That includes editorials, news stories, letters to the editor, and multimedia features on easternherald.com.

Editor's Picks

Trending Stories

Gun violence and domestic terrorism in the US – Experts call for safety

The Minneapolis Catholic school shooting has thrust gun violence...

Daisy Drew controversy: Why leaks never break her brand

Daisy Drew controversy has become a recurring headline in...

Discover more from The Eastern Herald

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading