The (perhaps) bigger story about the woman is the following, from the same article you cited:
'She is a very determined person. She has never wanted to go to hospital, she's never received any particular [health] care. She's suffered from a bit of bronchitis, had a [blood] transfusion, and some stitches, but always at home,' he said."
So this idea that thanks to modern medicine, people live longer lives, may not be true at all, with the worlds' oldest living person avoiding it almost entirely.
Regarding what you said about pasteurization, in the USA it didn't become mandatory to pasteurize milk until the 1970's, and the same is true for most of the world. If States around the world found it necessary to ban raw milk, it's because people were widely and willfully buying, selling and consuming milk raw. Nobody has to make selling raw meat illegal, since almost nobody eats it raw. But wait until this lifestyle becomes more popular, and you may see governments rush to ban it's sale "to protect people from their own bad choices".
Argentina isn't particularly known for raw foods to any extent, and yet even in large cities like Buenos Aires, it was common until the 1960's or 70's to consume raw milk and eggs in everyday life. That doesn't mean that all milk and eggs were consumed raw, not even close, but that raw eggs and milk were consumed normally or sporadically by most people.
Re: France, the very fact that these large cheesemaking companies are doing this covertly proves that the french consumers very much want to consume raw cheese. I realize most French food is not raw. Steak tartare has become a rare thing, even if in the last few years it may have resurged as a curiosity. But what I meant is that raw animal foods were and are eaten in France, in much of europe and to a certain extent in most of the world, to varying degrees, but they're far less rare than most people realize. Even something as commonplace as prosciutto, beef jerky or salami, while most people don't realize it, is simply salted and condimented and somewhat dried and aged (and often a little rotten) raw meat.