Oman Daily Observer

UN finds herpes killed millions of Iraqi carp

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BAGHDAD: The sudden death last year of millions of Iraqi carp, used in the country’s signature dish, was caused by a strain of herpes harmless to humans, the United Nations said Wednesday.

Iraqi fish farmers south of Baghdad were left reeling in late 2018 after piles of dead carp were found washed up on the banks of the Euphrates River or floating in their cages.

Rumours swirled over whether the fish were sick or the river had been poisoned, and Iraqi politician­s put the issue at the top of their agenda.

On Wednesday, the United Nations Environmen­t Programme (UNEP) said a months-long internatio­nal investigat­ion had pinned down the slippery source: The Koi Herpes Virus.

“KHV is a very serious and lethal disease that is known to cause almost 100 per cent mortality rates in carps,” said Dr Thomas Wahli, who heads the Swiss Reference Laboratory for Notifiable Diseases.

Flame-grilled carp seasoned with sauces made from onions and tomato and known as masgoof, national delicacy.

The mass deaths in the fish farms of Saddat al Hindiyah in Babylon province, about 80 kilometres (50 is Iraq’s miles) south of Baghdad, had panicked carp farmers, who said they had lost thousands of dollars overnight.

Samples of the dead fish, water, sediment and feed were sent to Wahli’s lab as well as facilities in Jordan and Italy.

They confirmed the carp were killed by the viral outbreak, which does not pose a threat to humans, the UN said.

Temperatur­es in the Euphrates dropped to around 24 degrees in November, a prime environmen­t for KHV.

The overstocki­ng of fish farms and low-quality river water may have also spread the disease further, it said.

Iraq produces 29,000 tonnes of fish each year, according to 2016 statistics gathered by the United Nations’ Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on.

“This is the first case of Koi Herpes Virus disease in Iraq, and it is a significan­t case report which will need to be notified to the World Organisati­on for Animal Health,” Iraq’s Environmen­t Minister Ala Alwan said.

“We are pleased to have been able to get to the bottom of this difficult case,” Alwan added.

 ??  ?? Iraqi men sit in boats amidst dead carp from nearby farms floating on the Euphrates river near the town of Sadat al Hindiya, north of the central Iraqi city of Hilla. — AFP file photo
Iraqi men sit in boats amidst dead carp from nearby farms floating on the Euphrates river near the town of Sadat al Hindiya, north of the central Iraqi city of Hilla. — AFP file photo

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