BEIJING — China’s unprecedented quarantining of virus-hit Wuhan has separated millions from their families—and many from their pets, prompting worried owners and kind strangers to take to social media to ensure left-behind animals are looked after.
The virus that has killed more than 400 in China emerged during the Lunar New Year when hundreds of millions were traveling across the country, and the subsequent lockdown on Wuhan and central Hubei province has left many stranded.
The hashtag “save the pets left behind in Wuhan” became the third-most searched term on the Twitter-like Weibo platform on Monday, receiving millions of views from those unable to return to the city, where the virus is believed to have originated, and others willing to help.
“Please help me feed my cat,” one user posted on Jan. 30.
On Monday, he used the hashtag to post the happy news that he had found a “young man” who had agreed to go and feed his cat Maomao.
“In the video chat, after the man opened the door Maomao meowed so miserably, no one has been home for more than a dozen days,” he said.
More than 2,000 people also joined a group created by the Wuhan Small Animal Protection Association on Chinese chat app QQ to look for “kind-hearted people” willing to feed pets left behind in Wuhan by owners unable to enter the city.
Worried to death
One member on Monday asked if anyone would be willing to feed a pet snake.
“I’m worried to death,” said the user, who posted anonymously. “I didn’t let him hibernate this winter because he’s a baby snake.” That post had no takers as of late Monday.
“If any cats and dogs are stranded and you can let me in, I can help you feed them on livestream,” wrote Katherine Cui in eastern Zhejiang province—where the city of Wenzhou was placed under a similar lockdown to Wuhan on Sunday.
“I have many pets at home, and plenty of cat food, dog food and kitty litter, I know too well how important fur babies are,” she said.
Banned pets
The drive to save pets comes after multiple Chinese media reports said apartment complexes had banned pets to stop the spread of the virus, as well as unverified reports that people had thrown animals to their deaths for similar reasons.
While the novel coronavirus is believed to have crossed over from animals to humans at a Wuhan market known for selling live wildlife, the World Health Organization has said on its Weibo account there is “no evidence that dogs, cats and other pets can catch the novel coronavirus.”
China is home to a growing population of pet owners, with pet-related spending in China reaching $23.7 billion in 2018, according to a report by Pet Fair Asia and pet website Goumin.com.