Thousands of mink in Denmark fearing the terrible tomb of COVID


Copenhagen – One ran Clay from Mink, Denmark The country is facing a new horror due to concerns about a coronavirus mutation, as animal cadres re-emerge from the earth. The Macabre incident took place in a military training area outside the western city of Holstebro, where thousands of mink were placed in a makeshift group.

According to local police, the debris landed on the surface, pushed by gases released by the decomposer.

The environment ministry said the mink should be covered with at least five feet of soil, but public broadcaster D.R. Accordingly, they were buried about three feet deep in the area outside Holstebro.

Thousands of mink mink are buried in the Noor Fielding near Holstebro at the Joske Dragongrament Training Ground
Thousands of mink are buried on November 12, 2020, at the Gidsk Dragongrant Training Ground at N નre Fielding, near Holstebro, Denmark.

Morton Striker / Retzo Scanpix / Reuters


Authorities are playing with our environment and using it as a dumping ground, local officials Leaf Brogger told the Zeelands-Posten newspaper.

Adding to the frustration, the animals were buried near the lake, raising fears of phosphorus and nitrogen pollution, although officials promised to rectify the situation.

The ministry insisted that the escape from Minko’s grave was “a temporary problem associated with the decaying process of the animals.”

The ministry said the vehicle would be monitored round the clock to avoid potential problems for animals and humans.

Photos and videos of the annoying sight obscured social media, a Twitter user said in 2020 “Year of the Zombie Mutant Killer Mint.”

Caged mints are seen during an outbreak of coronavirus disease (COVD-19) at a mink farm in Gjoel, northern Zutland.
Employees of the Danish Emergency Management Agency at the Danish Veterinary and Food Administration and protective equipment are spotted amid an outbreak of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) on October 8, 2020, at a mink farm in Gejol, North Jutland, Denmark.

Ritza Scanpix / Henning Beggar / Reuters


In early November, Denmark – the world’s largest exporter of mink fur – announced that it would eliminate all 15 million mink in the country once a modified version of the novel coronavirus was discovered and the effectiveness of future vaccines was considered to be at stake.

Two weeks after the decree was issued – amid a political crisis over the legitimacy of the decision – the government concluded last week that the potential threat to human vaccines had “most likely been extinguished”, in the absence of any new cases. Modified version

More than 10 million mink have already been found in the Scandinavian country, according to the latest figures.

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