The Borneo Post

‘African swine fever in China here to stay’

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BEIJING: The African swine fever spreading rapidly in China is “here to stay”, the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on( FAO) said yesterday, adding that it was almost certain to spread to other Asian countries.

The fever was first detected in China in early August and has been found in 18 farms or abattoirs in six provinces, with many cases more than a 1,000 kms apart, the FAO said in a statement.

With pork such a popular meat in many Asian countries, the FAO said the spread of the virus to China’s neighbours is a near certainty, and likely through movements of products containing infected pork.

“The geographic­al spread, of which ASF has been repeated in such a short period of time, means that transbound­ary emergence of the virus, likely through movements of products containing infected pork, will almost certainly occur,” said Juan Lubroth, chief veterinary officer at FAO.

The response to the disease is “extremely challengin­g” because the virus can survive for months in meat products, animal feed and swill, said the FAO.

China has banned the transport of live hogs in provinces where infections have been reported, a move that has idled traders, crowded farm pens with unsold pigs, and left slaughterh­ouses short of stock.

Pork prices in the country’s populous south have spiked as demand rises ahead of a week-long holiday in October and highlights the prospect of imports.

Lubroth said the most likely explanatio­n for the vast distances the virus has spread in China is through processed or raw pork products and less likely through the movement of live animals.

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