this post was submitted on 02 Dec 2024
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Summary

Three people died and 32 were hospitalized in the Philippines after eating a stew made from an endangered sea turtle in Maguindanao del Norte.

Symptoms included vomiting, diarrhea, and abdominal spasms, likely caused by toxins from contaminated algae consumed by the turtle.

The stew was a traditional dish, but hunting or consuming sea turtles is illegal under Philippine law.

Similar poisoning cases have occurred, with sea turtles traditionally hunted for their flesh and eggs in some communities.

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[–] jaybone 21 points 2 months ago (7 children)

Similar cases have occurred? And it’s endangered and illegal?

That must be some pretty motherfuckin good goddamn soup.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 2 months ago (4 children)

I had to double-check the location where the incident happened, prepared to write paragraphs on how the area is poor and undeveloped and so environmental protections are ignored when literal hunger is the more important consideration... but I am not too sure now.

The overall area is poor, not entirely remote, but still remote in comparison to places like Manila or Davao. I was under the impression that this event happened on a remote island municipality where sourcing food is an issue, but maybe it's just poverty?

Not excusing the act nor gloating over the deaths though, just trying to understand (and failing) how this came to be. Not to mention why they ignored the glaring signs before they slaughtered and cooked the creature. In the news report I saw here locally, and I am recalling from memory, it is said that the victims found the turtle's shell to be discolored, but still proceeded anyways.

[–] SpruceBringsteen 7 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Article mentions indigenous.

Also, this is southern Mindanao we're talking about. Cagayan de Oro is kinda viewed as backswoodsy by people in Manila and this is well south of Cagayan. This is well off the beaten path.

Anywhere you go in the Philippines you can find hunger. It's everywhere. Not exonerating them, but we're likely talking subsistence level fishermen here.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 months ago

I am from Manila, so I have been careful not to brush the area off as "backswoodsy and poor". But yeah, that's why I was prepared to explain things off as "yeah, they're poor and desperate". But then again, it feels wrong, IDK, lol~

I missed the word "indigenous" even though it's mentioned not just in the article, but also in the news report I saw. With a possible few exceptions, the indigenous peoples in the Philippines have been neglected and marginalized, and their communities been poor because of that.

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