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Filipino Good Friday flagellants face rabies risk
18 Apr 2007 06:25:02 GMT
Source: Reuters
MANILA, April 18 (Reuters) - Dozens of men who whipped and cut their backs for a gory Good Friday ceremony in the Philippines risk contracting rabies after a fellow flagellant died of the virus earlier this month.

The men shared a blade to rip their skin before flaying it to a pulp with a bamboo whip in the northern province of Pampanga. The ritual, which also involves voluntary crucifixions, is meant to mark the suffering of Jesus Christ.

Dr Maria Clara Aquino, a government doctor in Pampanga, said on Tuesday that anti-rabies vaccines had been give to 103 people who could have been exposed to the virus.

Rabies is usually transmitted by a bite from an infected animal. The period between infection and the first flu-like symptoms is normally 3 to 12 weeks but can be as long as two years.

The mainly Catholic country's Good Friday spectacle began in 1962 as a village production but has grown over the years to become a media and tourist attraction.
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A human rights protester wearing a mask resembling Philippines President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo demonstrates outside the Philippines consulate in Sydney May 29, 2007. The small group of protesters held banners and chanted slogans, demanding answers regarding the 850 political killings, 200 abductions and more than 300 attempted killings they claim have occurred since Arroyo came to office in 2001. Arroyo arrives in Australia Wednesday for a two-day visit during which she is expected to sign an agreement to strengthen military ties between the two countries.



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