The world lurks on thorns! Also seen in cats now



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The world lurks on thorns!  Now seen in cats

According to the Dagbladet Holstebro-Struer newspaper story, the State Serum Institute (SSI) conducted a Kovid-19 test on 33 cats at 7 mink farms where minkes were recently euthanized. Twelve of the cats from the two farms were infected and some cats were euthanized.

The world lurks on thorns!  Also seen in cats now

Lone Nielsen, director of the Kattens Vaern cat rights association, confirmed that they helped the Institute in the slaughter of cats. Nielsen did not provide information on how many cats were euthanized.

The world lurks on thorns!  Also seen in cats now

In Denmark, criticized Food Minister Mogens Jensen resigned on the grounds that the slaughter of all mink farms in Denmark has no legal basis.

The world lurks on thorns!  Also seen in cats now

While the mutated virus spreading from Denmark creates a shock effect, experts warn of the warning, stressing that it will be very difficult for the world to fight another chaos.

The world lurks on thorns!  Now seen in cats

An EU health agency has warned that transmission of the coronavirus between mink populations could cause the virus to mutate rapidly before passing to humans.

The world lurks on thorns!  Also seen in cats now

Such mutations carry the risk of the virus becoming more contagious and deadly, increasing the risk of reinfection or rendering future vaccines ineffective.

The world lurks on thorns!  Now seen in cats

It was decided to kill about 17 million animals on mink farms after the cases that emerged on farms in Denmark, the world’s largest producer of mink fur. But the horror didn’t stop there.

The world lurks on thorns!  Now seen in cats

The terrifying news from the country never stops. Dead minkas who were killed and buried as part of the coronavirus massacre in Denmark began to emerge from their graves.

The world lurks on thorns!  Now seen in cats

The lifeless and decomposing bodies of the mink began to rise above the ground from shallow pits where they were buried as they filled with gas.

The world lurks on thorns!  Also seen in cats now

In West Jutland, the area where millions of minks were slaughtered, police rushed to the scene to reburial the animals after authorities insisted there was no risk of infection. “Gases can form as bodies rot,” National Police spokesman Thomas Kristensen said on state television, and that this could cause bodies to expand.



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