Illustrative image (Source: VNA) provinces and cities nationwide must take drastic measures to prevent animal
diseases, particularly African Swine Fever (ASF), from entering Vietnam, said
.
He was speaking at an online conference held in Hanoi on
September 14 by the to seek ways
to prevent animal diseases for this year’s fall and winter.
Requesting that cities and provinces nationwide
strengthen inspection to detect hotbeds of diseases on poultry and livestock early
on and prevent them from spreading, Dung underscored the importance of proper
vaccinations for animals and the provision of prevention guidelines at local
levels.
As there is no vaccine or cure for ASF, the most
effective measure at present is to actively prevent it from entering the
country, said Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Ha Cong
Tuan.
To do this, relevant ministries and agencies need to
tighten control on the transportation of pork and its products, as well as promote
safe pig farming, he added.
ASF is a type of infectious hemorrhagic fever which results
in a 90-100 percent mortality rate for pigs. Although the disease is not
dangerous to humans, it can cause great economic losses for farmers and harm
pork trading.
It is spread from pig to pig through various ways,
including animal feed contaminated with the pathogen, carriers such as ticks,
or direct contact between infected pigs and healthy ones.
From the end of 2017 through to September 10, 17 countries and regions in
Europe and Asia such as China and Estonia have had ASF outbreaks, with over
560,000 pigs culled, according to the World Organisation for Animal Health
(OIE).
From the start of August to September 10, China reported 14 outbreaks in six
provinces, with 38,000 pigs culled, according to the OIE and the UN Food and
Agriculture Organisation (FAO). The disease is moving southward towards provinces
near Vietnam.
There is a risk of ASF virus being brought into Vietnam
through smuggling and the transportation of pork and pork products with unclear
origin which is quite popular in northern border provinces.
It is vital to protect pig farms from the virus by
fostering biosafety and intensify pasteurisation in farms, said Ken Inui from
the FAO.
Inui suggested the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural
Development promptly draw up an emergency response plan and raise public
awareness of the disease. He also urged for an immediate ban on the illegal
trading of pigs from China to Vietnam.–VNA
Source: VietnamPlus
