
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
SEVERAL PEOPLE TREATED AT AN ANTI-RABIES CLINIC AFTER EXPOSURE Several people have required treatment at an anti-rabies clinic after exposure to a puppy carrying the disease. The dog had
been illegally imported to the south of France from Morocco. The puppy, which was smuggled in on December 16, died in Var on December 29, however it ‘nipped’ at least one person before its
death. “On January 5, the Nancy Laboratory for Rabies and Wildlife confirmed that the puppy had rabies,” announced the Ministry of Agriculture on Tuesday (January 16). “The animal, which was
illegally imported from Morocco, died 13 days after its introduction to France.” All individuals who were exposed to the animal have been contacted by the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur
regional health authority and taken into care at an anti-rabies clinic, said the Agriculture Ministry. The Var prefecture said that “one person had been ‘nipped’ by the dog”, but nobody was
bitten. It added that an investigation had been opened into how the dog had entered France. READ MORE: FOUND A DISTRESSED BIRD OR ANIMAL IN FRANCE? HERE’S WHAT NOT TO DO IS RABIES PRESENT IN
FRANCE? The involvement of the Ministry of Agriculture is an indication of how seriously rabies is taken in France. The country has been officially free of rabies since 2001, with the
exception of bats, which can be asymptomatic carriers of the disease. The importation of animals, pets or otherwise, is strictly controlled. It is forbidden to introduce dogs and cats into
France without a vaccination passport including details of valid anti-rabies vaccination, said the ministry. READ MORE PET TRAVEL: CAN I TAKE MY DOG OR CAT WITH ME ON A TRAIN IN FRANCE?
WHICH NON-EU COUNTRIES ARE ‘EXEMPT’ FROM THE EU’S PET TRAVEL RULES? READER'S TIP ON PET PASSPORT AFTER CAT ISSUES BOARDING UK-FRANCE FERRY