Japan culls pigs after cholera outbreak
JAPAN is suffering its first outbreak of pig cholera in more than 25 years, authorities said yesterday after culling more than 600 animals and suspending pork exports.
The fever, a different kind from the African swine fever that has broken out in China, was found in a farm in central Japan’s Gifu city, the agriculture ministry said.
The farm saw 80 pigs die last week after catching the highlycontagious disease, according to a ministry official.
Early tests showed negative results for classical swine fever, as the illness is officially known.
But follow-up tests came out positive yesterday, prompting the cull of all 610 pigs at the farm, he added.
“We are now processing the livestock there and disinfecting the farm,” he said, adding that officials had set up sterilization points on access roads to the affected farm.
The government has set up a team of specialists to analyze possible infection routes, the agricultural ministry said in a statement.
Tokyo halted pork exports after the outbreak was confirmed.
The nation sold roughly US$9 million in raw pork meat to foreign markets last year.
Japan saw its last case of classic swine fever, which does not affect humans, in 1992.
The disease continues to rage in many parts of Asia, Europe and Latin America.