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Teenage boy dies of bubonic plague in Mongolia after eating marmot | |
(about 8 hours later) | |
Two others being treated with antibiotics after death of 15-year-old, health ministry says | Two others being treated with antibiotics after death of 15-year-old, health ministry says |
A 15-year-old boy has died of bubonic plague in western Mongolia after eating an infected marmot, the country’s health ministry has said. | A 15-year-old boy has died of bubonic plague in western Mongolia after eating an infected marmot, the country’s health ministry has said. |
Two other teenagers who also ate the marmot were being treated with antibiotics, said a ministry spokesperson, Narangerel Dorj. | Two other teenagers who also ate the marmot were being treated with antibiotics, said a ministry spokesperson, Narangerel Dorj. |
The government imposed a quarantine on an area of Gobi-Altai province, where the cases occurred. The health ministry said 15 people who had contact with the boy were quarantined and receiving antibiotics. | The government imposed a quarantine on an area of Gobi-Altai province, where the cases occurred. The health ministry said 15 people who had contact with the boy were quarantined and receiving antibiotics. |
Plague is found in marmots, large rodents that live in burrows in the sprawling north Asian grassland, and some other wild animals in parts of Mongolia, north-western China and eastern Russia. | Plague is found in marmots, large rodents that live in burrows in the sprawling north Asian grassland, and some other wild animals in parts of Mongolia, north-western China and eastern Russia. |
The Mongolian government warned the public not to hunt or eat marmots. | The Mongolian government warned the public not to hunt or eat marmots. |
In 2019, Mongolia imposed a six-day quarantine in its westernmost province of Bayan-Ulgii, which borders Russia and China, after an ethnic Kazakh couple died of plague after eating raw marmot. | In 2019, Mongolia imposed a six-day quarantine in its westernmost province of Bayan-Ulgii, which borders Russia and China, after an ethnic Kazakh couple died of plague after eating raw marmot. |
In an unrelated case, a patient who was infected with plague in China’s northern region of Inner Mongolia is improving, according to China’s official Xinhua news agency. | In an unrelated case, a patient who was infected with plague in China’s northern region of Inner Mongolia is improving, according to China’s official Xinhua news agency. |
Xinhua said 15 people who had close contact with the patient were released from quarantine on Sunday. The agency said the government had ended its top-level emergency response. | Xinhua said 15 people who had close contact with the patient were released from quarantine on Sunday. The agency said the government had ended its top-level emergency response. |
An official announcement earlier said a warning for the public in the Bayannur region of Inner Mongolia to avoid eating marmot and report dead animals would remain in place until the end of 2020. | An official announcement earlier said a warning for the public in the Bayannur region of Inner Mongolia to avoid eating marmot and report dead animals would remain in place until the end of 2020. |
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