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A serviceman of the Belarussian Interior Ministry's special unit demonstrates his skills during a show in Minsk, February 28, 2010.  REUTERS/Vasily Fedosenko

Strange and unusual

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    China puts a stop to snake-bitten cock-in-a-pot

    BEIJING
    Mon Jun 1, 2009 2:29pm EDT
    A chicken among 2,700 birds about to be slaughtered by workers from the Health and Environmental Hygiene Department is seen in a market after it was declared an infected area in Hong Kong June 7, 2008. REUTERS/Bobby Yip

    A chicken among 2,700 birds about to be slaughtered by workers from the Health and Environmental Hygiene Department is seen in a market after it was declared an infected area in Hong Kong June 7, 2008.

    Credit: Reuters/Bobby Yip

    BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese health authorities are putting a stop to restaurants serving chickens which have been bitten to death by poisonous snakes and cooked up for a supposedly detoxing meal.

    Oddly Enough  |  China

    The dish, served by a small number of eateries in the southern province of Guangdong and the southwestern city of Chongqing, has generated a storm of publicity and controversy in the Chinese media and amongst bloggers.

    A video showing a cook holding a snake and forcing it to bite a live chicken until it dies has been widely circulated online, (http:/you.video.sina.com.cn/b/21145091-1405053100.html) generating mainly angry comments.

    "It's disgusting and really cruel," wrote one poster on the popular portal sina.com.cn.

    "Not only is it cruel and blood-thirsty, but totally amoral," the Chongqing Business Daily cited a neighbor to one of the restaurants as saying.

    Health authorities in Guangdong have already told restaurants to stop serving "poisonous snake-bitten chicken" and now those in Chongqing have joined in.

    "Although nobody has been poisoned, this at the very least is an irregular way of slaughtering poultry," the business newspaper quoted a local health official as saying.

    One dish, prized among some in Guangdong, is monkey brains scooped from a live animal, which has regularly upset animal rights campaigners in the West.

    (Reporting by Ben Blanchard and Nick Macfie; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani)



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