According to the British "Guardian" reported on September 24th, Vietnamese police recently smashed a den for processing second-hand condoms and seized 345,000 condoms, which will be sold directly after secondary processing. At present, it is not clear how many goods have entered the market, nor where these goods are sold, whether they are sold to the domestic market or the international market.
The live video shows that in a warehouse in Pingyang province, southern Vietnam, dozens of big bags are piled up, filled with used condoms without reprocessing. When I opened the bag, I saw the condom inside. In my eyes, it is just a few bags full of bacteria and viruses, 360 kilograms.
So what? Where did these condoms come from?
The owner of the warehouse said earlier that the goods were sold to them by an unknown person. As for the specific source, it is likely to be some romantic places.
After buying these second-hand goods, the workers in the factory process them. First, put the used condom into boiling water, which is considered disinfection. Then, air-dried, shaped with a mold, and put on a packaging bag for resale.
Condoms can also be recycled, which is really a slippery record. In order to make money, profiteers really don't even have a bottom line. Let's not talk about the dirty ones, and those bacteria and viruses. Can we achieve disinfection effect only by boiling water without other disinfection methods?
For example, HIV, you know, under normal circumstances, it takes about 20 minutes for HIV to be successfully killed in boiling water. If an AIDS patient has used this thing and sold it to others for reuse after such treatment, will it not infect others with HIV?