Viral Disease Killing Felines on ‘Cat Island’ Cyprus 

A domestic cat suffering from Feline Infectious Peritonitis (FIP) is in quarantine at a veterinary clinic in Nicosia on June 20, 2023. (AFP)
A domestic cat suffering from Feline Infectious Peritonitis (FIP) is in quarantine at a veterinary clinic in Nicosia on June 20, 2023. (AFP)
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Viral Disease Killing Felines on ‘Cat Island’ Cyprus 

A domestic cat suffering from Feline Infectious Peritonitis (FIP) is in quarantine at a veterinary clinic in Nicosia on June 20, 2023. (AFP)
A domestic cat suffering from Feline Infectious Peritonitis (FIP) is in quarantine at a veterinary clinic in Nicosia on June 20, 2023. (AFP)

A sickly ginger kitten named Bebe is pulled out of a cat carrier at a veterinary clinic in the Cypriot capital, Nicosia.

The six-month-old is suffering from a strain of feline coronavirus that is wreaking havoc on the prolific cat population of Cyprus.

Cats are everywhere on the eastern Mediterranean island, home to the earliest evidence of the animal's domestication and known by some as the "island of cats".

Many of the island's felines are strays. They wander at will into people's gardens, sit expectantly beside restaurant diners in hopes of a tasty morsel, and loiter near garbage bins.

Feline infectious peritonitis (FIP), which is not transmittable to humans, has rapidly spread across Cyprus in recent months, being "highly contagious" among cats, veterinarian Kostis Larkou said as he gently examined the visibly disoriented Bebe.

Animal advocates say the number of cats dying from disease is significantly higher than the 107 cases of FIP officially reported by the agriculture ministry in the southern part of the island.

"We have lost 300,000 cats since January" from FIP, said Dinos Ayiomamitis, head of Cats PAWS Cyprus and vice-president of Cyprus Voice for Animals.

Cyprus has been split since a 1974 Turkish invasion in response to a Greek-sponsored coup. The self-proclaimed Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, which covers the northern third of the island, is recognized only by Ankara.

But cats on both sides of the United Nations-patrolled buffer zone are dying from the illness.

Experts say the island's cat population is equal to or even exceeds the human population of a little more than one million.

In the south, Ayiomamitis estimates that a third of the cats have succumbed to the virus. Cats with FIP have symptoms including fever, abdominal swelling, weakness, and sometimes even aggressiveness.

But with so many stray cats, the contagion has proven difficult to diagnose and document.

Ancient cat history

Cypriots have a long and intertwined history with their furry friends.

Legend has it that a Roman empress, Helena, first brought cats to Cyprus to do away with poisonous snakes about 1,700 years ago.

But archaeological evidence of cats' domestication on the island dates back further than anywhere else in the world -- to 9,500 years ago at the Neolithic village of Shillourokambos, where the remains of a cat and a human were found deliberately buried together.

That bond between feline and human has continued through the millennia, leaving animal lovers like Ayiomamitis taking care of the island's cats today.

He has fears, though, for the roughly 60 cats he has been feeding at a cemetery in the capital for a quarter of a century.

"The colony is doing well, but we are worried because if one is infected, the others will be too," says the retiree, 70, as cats scampered up marble tombstones.

Several people who feed stray cats told AFP that many of their regulars are disappearing, and very few corpses are found, noting that when cats are sick, they often self-isolate and die alone.

An outbreak is suspected to be also spreading across cat populations in nearby Lebanon, Israel and Türkiye, but in the absence of studies, that cannot be confirmed, said Demetris Epaminondas, vice president of the Pancyprian Veterinary Association.

To contain the spread, two treatment options have been considered. One is molnupiravir, an anti-Covid pill which officials say could not be authorized for use on animals in Cyprus.

Another antiviral tablet, GS-441524, chemically similar to the Covid-19 treatment remdesivir, is approved for animal use in Britain and for importation to Cyprus, with restrictions.

But its cost, at 3,000 to 7,000 euros (about $3,300-$7,700) per cat, is prohibitive, and there is no supply in Cyprus.

Black market

For weeks, Epaminondas has been trying to obtain government authorization for molnupiravir, which would cost a far more affordable 200 euros per cat.

The agriculture ministry told AFP it was examining all possible means of addressing the issue through "various therapeutic preparations available on the European market".

Some have resorted to clandestine methods to save their pets.

"We bought our medicines on the black market online, or from Facebook groups. But we keep our suppliers secret so that we can continue to treat our animals," said one Cypriot, requesting anonymity because of the questionable legality of her actions.

Vasiliki Mani, 38, a member of several animal welfare organizations, is demanding a swift solution.

In January, she spent 3,600 euros to treat two stray cats with FIP.

"I have spent all my savings," she said, denouncing the cruelty of "allowing animals to die" in Cyprus.

If FIP continues to spread, Mani lamented, Cyprus will become "the island of dead cats".



Iceland Resumes Whale Hunt Amid Protest

FILED - 23 August 2019, Iceland, Reykjavik: FILE PHOTO - The whaling ships Hvalur 9 (L) and Hvalur 8 are docked in the harbor. Photo: Steffen Trumpf/dpa
FILED - 23 August 2019, Iceland, Reykjavik: FILE PHOTO - The whaling ships Hvalur 9 (L) and Hvalur 8 are docked in the harbor. Photo: Steffen Trumpf/dpa
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Iceland Resumes Whale Hunt Amid Protest

FILED - 23 August 2019, Iceland, Reykjavik: FILE PHOTO - The whaling ships Hvalur 9 (L) and Hvalur 8 are docked in the harbor. Photo: Steffen Trumpf/dpa
FILED - 23 August 2019, Iceland, Reykjavik: FILE PHOTO - The whaling ships Hvalur 9 (L) and Hvalur 8 are docked in the harbor. Photo: Steffen Trumpf/dpa

One of Iceland's two remaining whaling ships set out this week to hunt the giant mammals after a two-year hiatus, local media and campaigners reported on Saturday.

Iceland is one of only three countries that still openly permit whaling, alongside Norway and Japan -- despite international opprobrium from the public and animal welfare organizations.

A protester chained himself to the mast of the vessel before it left the port of Reykjavik on Friday. He climbed down in the evening and was escorted away by police, RUV media said.

"It is so disheartening to see Iceland's whaling boat leave port to begin another season of whale slaughter despite overwhelming evidence that there is no humane way to kill a whale," Joanna Swabe of the Humane World for Animals NGO said after the second vessel headed out to sea.

"These ocean giants will very likely endure an agonizing death for meat that virtually no one in Iceland wants to eat," she told AFP.

Iceland cancelled its whale hunt in 2024 and 2025, partly because economic woes had cut demand and the industry was not deemed sufficiently profitable.

The International Whaling Commission banned the commercial killing of whales in 1986 amid alarm at the declining stock of the marine mammals.

Iceland and Norway are the only two countries still openly practicing commercial whaling in defiance of the moratorium.

Japan hunts the ocean giants for what it claims is "scientific" purposes, even if most of the meat ends up on the market for consumption.

Iceland's Marine and Freshwater Research Institute has recommended a reduction in the number of whales harpooned this season, which runs from mid-June to mid-September.

The 2026 annual number of fin whales killed should not exceed 150 animals, a 28-percent drop on the recommended annual catch for the period 2018-2025, it said.

The fin whale is the second largest animal on Earth after the blue whale.

The Institute set an annual quota of 168 animals for the minke whale hunt this year, a 23-percent drop.

The government is due this autumn to table a bill on banning whaling altogether.


2 Arrested in Spain over Exotic Animal Trafficking Network

A dog drinks water in Palma de Mallorca on June 20, 2026, on the eve of the start of the first official heatwave of this summer. (Photo by Jaime REINA / AFP)
A dog drinks water in Palma de Mallorca on June 20, 2026, on the eve of the start of the first official heatwave of this summer. (Photo by Jaime REINA / AFP)
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2 Arrested in Spain over Exotic Animal Trafficking Network

A dog drinks water in Palma de Mallorca on June 20, 2026, on the eve of the start of the first official heatwave of this summer. (Photo by Jaime REINA / AFP)
A dog drinks water in Palma de Mallorca on June 20, 2026, on the eve of the start of the first official heatwave of this summer. (Photo by Jaime REINA / AFP)

Two people have been arrested and eight others placed under investigation in Spain over their alleged involvement in a network trafficking exotic animals, police said on Saturday.

According to AFP, the Guardia Civil said it launched an investigation in late 2025 after receiving information about suspected wildlife crimes in the southern province of Seville.

The probe led investigators to intercept a suitcase at Seville's San Pablo Airport containing several animals protected under international wildlife trade regulations that were allegedly being transported without the required documentation.

During searches of five homes and three industrial premises in Seville, officers seized 256 animals covered by international wildlife trade controls or other conservation measures.

Among the animals seized were savannah monitors, a large species of lizard native to sub-Saharan Africa that is commonly traded in the exotic pet market.

Officers also recovered red-eyed tree frogs found in the rainforests of Central America, spectacled caimans, a species of crocodilian native to Latin America, and an albino green iguana, a rare color variant prized by collectors.

Police also found 61 dogs and 28 cats which they believe were being bred for illegal sale.

Officers seized 56,965 euros in cash from one property, which investigators suspect was linked to the alleged trafficking operation.

Investigators suspect the group relied on employees of parcel delivery companies who facilitated the transport of live animals and falsified documentation.


2011 Japan Quake May Have Moved Whole Country Further East

A sailboat lies among the debris in Ofunato, Iwate Prefecture, Japan (Reuters)
A sailboat lies among the debris in Ofunato, Iwate Prefecture, Japan (Reuters)
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2011 Japan Quake May Have Moved Whole Country Further East

A sailboat lies among the debris in Ofunato, Iwate Prefecture, Japan (Reuters)
A sailboat lies among the debris in Ofunato, Iwate Prefecture, Japan (Reuters)

Minutes after the massive 2011 Japan earthquake and tsunami that killed nearly 20,000 people, “a previously unrecognized” phenomenon may have caused the whole country to shift further eastwards, a new study reveals, according to The Independent.

Such megaquakes are often followed by events that cause additional ground motion, which are related to aftershocks.

But exactly all the different ways in which aftershocks arise aren’t very clear, scientists say.

In a new study, researchers assessed satellite data to study the magnitude 9-Tohoku-Oki earthquake and its seismic aftereffects.

Researchers found that the devastating quake led to a sudden sliding of blocks of rock past each other along the fault line, the British newspaper reported.

It also led to seismic waves travelling through the Earth, bouncing off the planet’s core, and traveling back to the surface to reactivate the region’s tectonic plate boundaries.

These were “shear waves” that travelled through the Earth's interior and caused rock particles to vibrate in a "shear" or side-to-side motion.

Water inundates homes following the tsunami and earthquake that struck Natori city in northeastern Japan in 2011 (Reuters)

The latest findings reveal a previously unknown hazard that could potentially activate or reactivate the main area of a quake, according to the study published in the journal Science.

“We report an extraordinary observation of ground motion in Japan after the moment magnitude 9 2011 Tohoku-Oki earthquake attributed to a multiplate-interface slip event triggered by a shear wave that travelled to the Earth’s core and back,” researchers wrote in the study.

In the study, scientists re-examined satellite data to look for subtle movements in the minutes surrounding the 2011 quake.

They found that seismic waves travelling through the Earth and bouncing off the core shifted the whole of Japan by as much as 5-6mm.

While this may not be a lot and is a common amount of ground movement following large earthquakes, what surprised scientists was the area of land that had actually shifted.

The triggered slip “has the broadest rupture area of any single event yet documented”, researchers wrote.

“Its overall length is similar to that of mainland Japan (~3,000 km), exceeding the mainshock rupture length by 6‒7 times and more than doubling that of the 2004 great Sumatra Earthquake,” they wrote in the study.

As this ground movement was spread out over several minutes, people may not have felt it happen under their feet, researchers say.

Yet, this new type of seismic hazard needs to be further studied, researchers say.

“I think we should be aware of the fact that there could be this potential triggering of an event many minutes after [an earthquake’s] main shaking has passed,” study author Sunyoung Park told Scientific American.