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As Bali battles rabies surge, does dog meat raise the risk?

Nearly 30,000 people have been bitten by suspected rabid animals on the Indonesian resort island this year. Five died

5-MIN READ5-MINAisyah LlewellynPublished: 12:30pm, 5 Jul 2026In a quieter part of western Bali, far from the crowds and chaos of the south, a 38-year-old housewife was bitten by a stray cat while hanging out laundry in May.

Within weeks, she was dead: one of five people killed by rabies on the Indonesian resort island so far this year.

The following month, a rabid dog kept as a family pet in the same region, Jembrana regency, attacked two children and an adult. All three survived, thanks to swift post-exposure vaccination after tests confirmed that the animal was infected.

But they were far from the only victims. Between January and May 2026 alone, almost 30,000 people on the Hindu-majority island were bitten by suspected rabid animals and 21,000 received emergency vaccinations.

“Mass vaccination is urgently needed given the relatively high number of rabies cases recorded in Jembrana during the first half of this year,” I Gusti Ngurah Putu Sugiarta, the regency’s top animal health official, said in a statement following the latest attack.

Read original at South China Morning Post

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