Coronavirus found on frozen seafood in China
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[August 11, 2020]
BEIJING (Reuters) - Authorities in China
have found the novel coronavirus on the packaging of imported frozen
seafood that arrived from the port city of Dalian, which recently
battled a surge of cases, a local government said on Tuesday.
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The virus was found on the outer packaging of frozen seafood bought
by three companies in Yantai, a port city in eastern Shandong
province.
The Yantai city government said in a statement the seafood was from
an imported shipment that landed at Dalian but did not say where it
originated.
In July, customs officers in Dalian, a major port in the
northeastern province of Liaoning, found the coronavirus in the
packaging of frozen shrimps imported from Ecuador, and China then
suspended imports from three Ecuadorean shrimp producers.
The novel coronavirus is believed to have emerged in a market that
sold seafood and wildlife in the central Chinese city of Wuhan late
last year.
It has since spread around the world, with some new cases brought
back into China from returning travellers.
Some of the seafood that the three Yantai companies bought had been
processed for export, while the rest had been kept in cold storage
and has not entered the market, the Yantai government said.
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When asked if any of the processed seafood had been exported, a member of staff
at a coronavirus outbreak response unit in Yantai declined to elaborate,
referring Reuters to the Yantai city government statement.
Authorities had sealed off the goods, the city government said. Everyone who
handled the goods was under quarantine and have tested negative for the
coronavirus, it said.
The latest outbreak of coronavirus in Dalian city started in late July, with the
first case working at a seafood processing company. By Aug. 9, Dalian has
reported a total of 92 cases.
(Reporting By Gao Liangping, Judy Hua and Ryan Woo; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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