The Phnom Penh Post

Sale and use of diclofenac med banned to save vultures

- Voun Dara

THE Ministry of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries, in cooperatio­n with BirdLife Internatio­nal Cambodia, has banned the sale and use of diclofenac to safeguard the remaining Cambodian vulture population.

BirdLife Internatio­nal Cambodia on Monday issued a press release saying: “The Government of Cambodia has banned the veterinary sale and use of diclofenac in the Kingdom with immediate effect.

“The Government has taken this measure to safeguard the remaining Cambodian vulture population, which is declining and threatened with extinction.”

Bou Vorsak, Cambodia Programme Manager at Birdlife Internatio­nal, said the Ministry of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries gave notice of the measures to stop the import, distributi­on, supply and use of diclofenac in treating any kind of animal that could impact vultures.

“Our working group has issued a press release on the ministry’s notice with regard to the measures to stop the import, distributi­on, supply and use of all kinds of diclofenac,” Vorsak said.

He said diclofenac was ab

sent from Cambodia from 2004 until 2017 but remerged in 2018.

“We first found the medicine in Siem Reap province. A licensed company imported it, so we requested the ministry to ban its further sale and distributi­on. The medicine was imported from Vietnam and India,” Vorsak said.

He said vultures in Cambodia are at risk of extinction, with numbers declining some 50 per cent in recent years. The 2019 national census showed that only 120 recorded vultures are remaining in the Kingdom.

Vorsak said poisoning and loss of habitat were the main reasons behind their decrease.

Dr Julia Stenkat, an Angkor Centre for Conservati­on of Biodiversi­ty veterinari­an, said diclofenac was not a danger to most animals, but it was fatal to vultures.

“Diclofenac, whilst harmless to cattle and other livestock, results in the death of vultures if they feed on a carcass of an animal previously treated with this drug,” she said.

Dr Nou Vonika, the public health director of the Department of Animal Health and Veterinary at the General Directorat­e of Animal Health and Production, said that Minister of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries Veng Sakhon recognised the impact of diclofenac on the Kingdom’s vultures and supported the ban.

 ??  ?? Vultures feast on a carcass in Preah Vihear province.
Vultures feast on a carcass in Preah Vihear province.

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