Wednesday, March 13, 2013

RE: Phát giác 3,300 con heo chết trên dòng sông Shanghai (Thượng Hải),...


Subject: RE: Phát giác 3,300 con heo chết trên dòng sông Shanghai (Thượng Hải),...
Date: Wed, 13 Mar 2013 13:01:02 +0100

Chệt cộng ở dơ quá không ai chịu nổi nữa rồi !!! Vậy mà đòi bá chủ thế giới hả ? Còn khuya !


 Không nói , không làm , không viết

 Những gì có lợi cho cộng sản 

 

 HY

 



Date: Wed, 13 Mar 2013 12:48:03 +0100
Subject: Fwd: Phát giác 3,300 con heo chết trên dòng sông Shanghai (Thượng Hải),...
From:
To:

                        
Xin mời đọc . ACL 16


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: BMH <
Date: 2013/3/12
Subject: Fwd: Phát giác 3,300 con heo chết trên dòng sông Shanghai (Thượng Hải),...
To:



 

 

Thưa Qúy Vị, Quý NT và CH...

Theo tin của Nhật báo Telegraph, Anh quốc, có gần 3,000,
nhưng nếu nghe từ video clip thì cho biết,
đã phát giác 3,300 con heo chết trên dòng sông Shanghai (Thượng Hải),

dòng sông này cũng là nguồn cung cấp nước uống,
cho trên 23 triệu cư dân trong vùng lân cận..

Vấn đề ô nhiểm nặng nề môi trường ở Trung cộng không có chi mới lạ...
xảy ra khắp nơi...chỉ được chúng có tài che dấu...

Nay thêm chuyện
"thịt heo dư ăn..thả cho cá ăn....lấy nước cho người uống ...",
cũng là một chuyện ..như hàng ngàn chuyện khác,
đang xảy ra hàng ngày trên xứ sở của bọn Tàu phù xâm lược... 

Cứ tưởng tượng dân chúng địa phương vô tình uống phải nước đó ..
trong mấy ngày qua...
không bịnh ..sợ quá...cũng mang bịnh luôn...

Xin mời Qúy Vị đọc bài báo và xem video clip để tường và thẩm định..



 

 

BMH

Washington, D.C

 

 

 

 


Nearly 3,000 dead pigs found


in Shanghai river


Shanghai authorities have appealed for calm after China’s latest environmental and health scandal flowed into the city in the form of a putrid tide of rotting pigs.


By Tom Phillips, Hengliaojing Creek in Shanghai

9:31AM GMT 11 Mar 2013

More than 2,800 decomposing pigs have reportedly been pulled from the upper reaches of Shanghai’s Huangpu river – a source of drinking water for some of the mega-city’s 23 million inhabitants.

How so many pigs got there and why they died remains a mystery, although local media reports have suggested the animals may have been dumped in the river by an unscrupulous farmer from the neighbouring province of Zhejiang.

On Monday, authorities announced they had detected traces of porcine circovirus, a disease that affects pigs but which is not believed to infect humans, in the river.

However, authorities insisted there was no risk drinking water supplies would be contaminated and said tests of the Huangpu's waters had found no trace of foot and mouth disease, blue-ear pig disease or swine fever.


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The pigs were first discovered on Thursday, five days ago. Graphic photographs of the bloated, floating carcasses circulating online did little to calm residents' nerves.

"We have to act quickly to remove them all for fear of causing water pollution," Xu Rong, the environmental chief in Shanghai's Songjiang district told the state-run Global Times newspaper. "So far, water quality has not been affected but we have to remove the pigs as quickly as possible and can't let their bodies rot in the water."

On Monday lunchtime environmental protection workers were continuing their rescue operation, hauling pig after pig from the murky waters around Hengliaojing Creek, around 40 miles from central Shanghai.


 

"We have never, ever encountered so many dead pigs," said one mask-wearing member of the cleanup team, who declined to give his name. He said it took an average of 10 minutes to haul each animal from the water.

Around him, six barges and dozens of orange clad workers struggled to remove the animals from the murky water, using long, bamboo poles to spike or prod the floating carcasses. One local said they had seen helicopters flying over the affected area on the weekend.

The incident – dubbed "Hogwash" by one Shanghai-based micro-blogger – is the latest reminder of the toxic state of many Chinese rivers.

Last year, China's vice-minister for water resources, Hu Siyi, admitted that 20 percent of his country's rivers were "too toxic for human contact" while 40 percent were severely polluted.

 


 

Earlier this year, an online anti-pollution campaign saw several environmentalists offer cash rewards to politicians who dared to swim in the rivers they were supposed to be protected.

Shanghai's mayor is unlikely to want to bathe at Hengliaojing Creek, where the rotting corpses of dozens of pigs can be seen lying in a toxic nest of waste.

On Monday afternoon, the dead pigs shared their aquatic graveyard with a filthy mesh of glass and plastic bottles, flip-flops, shoes, what appeared to be bags of domestic and medical waste and even a plastic sex doll.

Nearby a riverside sign, in Chinese and English, read: "Prohibit Swimming Strictly."

 


 

Locals said this was not the first time their stretch of the river had suffered a swine invasion.

"We had dead pigs here last year too," complained 66-year-old Dong Aifang, who lives along the river. "We seem to have dead pigs all the time. It is non-stop.

"I am worried about the drinking water," she added. "It really, really stinks."

Qian Jiming, a 52-year-old resident of the nearby Xushou village, said he was concerned about local drinking water supplies being contaminated by "germs and bacteria."

But, for farmers like him, dead pigs had their uses, he pointed out. "We even used a dead pig as fertilizer once."

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