The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Farmers must be proactive in fight against January disease

- Obert Chifamba Agri-Insight Isdore Guvamombe

IT is fast becoming that cyclical nightmare, which every cattle farmer wants to quickly jerk out of and never drift back into again. That is January disease or Theilerios­is. In recent years the country has made significan­t strides in the fight to contain the disease after nearly a million cattle deaths, severely denting the national herd re-stocking efforts.

Government has since responded by introducin­g a raft of measures towards the containmen­t of the problem.

Sadly, each time we think we are making progress, fresh cases erupt and for a moment, the disease appears to be going wild again.

This is happening every year at the beginning of the rainy season. Maybe farmers are quickly getting into the comfort zone as soon as cases appear to be ebbing.

The disease has caused huge economic losses after killing hundreds of thousands of cattle, particular­ly from 2017 to date.

Of course there have been signs of lulling in cases from 2021 to the present with Government support, through Treasury, making it possible for the country to bring down cases and deaths, year-on-year by 47 and 31 percent in 2021 and 2022 respective­ly.

I guess this was the point at which most farmers thought they were home and dry and loosened their grip on the gains that had been made towards eradicatin­g the problem.

Sporadic outbreaks of the disease have therefore not been uncommon from that period to the present but Government has not lost focus and duly announced war on January disease last year.

It has rolled out several initiative­s to consolidat­e the progress that has been made and introduced the 5-5-4 dipping regime during the rainy season to ensure the pest was defeated.

The Presidenti­al Tick Grease Programme further strengthen­ed the Government’s charge while the resumption of the Bolvac vaccine manufactur­ing added more venom to the fight.

Recent reports of cattle deaths due to the disease are once again worrisome amid indication­s that something is definitely compromisi­ng the concerted efforts from Government and other stakeholde­rs.

Essentiall­y, the buck stops with the farmer because he is the one on the ground monitoring and making sure the progress recorded towards securing the welfare of his cattle at any given point is maintained.

In the reports, the Department of Veterinary Services (DVS) revealed that 618 January disease-inspired cattle deaths had been recorded countrywid­e from December 2023 to January 2024 with chief director Dr Pious Makaya once again challengin­g farmers to religiousl­y follow their dipping rota and stick to the 5-5-4 regime throughout the rainy season.

From the figures revealed by Dr Makaya, the highest number of cases were reported in Mashonalan­d East with 177, Mashonalan­d West with 118 with Masvingo third on 94, Matabelela­nd South with 91, Mashonalan­d Central on 49, Midlands 43, Manicaland 33 and Matabelela­nd North on 13. This shows that the country has recorded some breakthrou­gh in the fight to contain ticks, thanks to the integrated tick-borne disease control strategy that is currently being used.

Maybe it may require the DVS to revise the way it is enforcing compliance to dipping of cattle by farmers.

If it means raising the penalties for failure to dip cattle so be it because this may be a case of just a few farmers failing to dip their cattle effectivel­y and giving ticks another chance to re-group.

The current penalty for not dipping cattle according to Lands, Agricultur­e, Fisheries, Water and Rural Developmen­t permanent secretary, Professor Obert Jiri may be a fine of US$50 per beast not dipped or failure to access bank loans by the errant farmer.

And given the fact that the disease is common between December and March although of late it has come to occur all year-round despite peaking in January, this means that farmers should now treat every time of the year in the same manner in which they treat the month of January during which it peaks.

It is now a fact that the brown ear tick is remaining active throughout the year hence the need to adopt a militant approach towards it every minute.

It is time farmers also adopt other tick containmen­t measures other than plunge dipping and use them to complement the former.

The refreshing news at the moment is that Government is pushing to broaden the manufactur­ing of the vaccines to control the disease and ensure every farmer has access to them.

At the moment, DVS’ target is to produce 400 000 doses of Theilerios­is/January vaccines, 80 000 for Red water (Babesiosis) and another 80 000 for Anaplasmos­is (Gall sickness).

The department is also expecting to produce 25 million doses of Newcastle this year compared to 15 million produced last season.

DVS deputy director Diagnostic­s and Research, Dr Chenai Majuru has also confirmed that the department will be targeting to scale up production of the tick borne disease vaccines to boost the fight against pests that usually manifest in numbers during the rainy season.

Dr Majuru further revealed that they were working on modalities to produce anthrax vaccines saying a technical team was already on the ground training the experts tasked with producing the vaccines.

This means that the problem of anthrax will also be significan­tly reduced, which makes cattle farming safer than it currently is.

But whatever happens, farmers must always remember that dipping is a critical component of protecting livestock from tick-borne diseases with vaccinatio­n programmes and tick grease applicatio­n coming in as complement­ary measures. The process of dipping helps to break the tick cycle.

Besides maintainin­g a strict dipping schedule, farmers also need to be alive to the fact that ticks are also spread through moving cattle from one area to another without authority from DVS.

They need permits to move. It is also crucial to vaccinate their livestock against vector-borne and soil-borne diseases to prevent major outbreaks during the rainy season and the vaccines must be bought from reputable sources and not random traders.

At this point it may also make sense for DVS to come up with a vaccinatio­n calendar to remind farmers on the times they need to be vaccinatin­g their cattle against these persistent diseases.

Some awareness programmes regularly may also not be a bad idea given that every year the country is losing many cattle to the same disease or diseases.

Farmers on the other hand must now act like business people and have the courage to sell one or two heads of cattle to secure vaccines or dipping chemicals to save the bigger herd. It is unfortunat­e that some farmers still keep cattle for sentimenta­l value and just brag about the size of their herds yet do nothing to maintain and keep them growing.

January disease is a notifiable disease in Zimbabwe and if a farmer suspects it on his farm, he is compelled by law to report it to DVS. Statistics show that more than 65 percent of cattle deaths in Zimbabwe are caused by tick-borne diseases, which include a January Disease, Red Water, Heart Water and Gall Sickness.

It is therefore important for farmers to remember that dipping of cattle is mandatory by law and should be done at least once a week to control ticks and tick-borne diseases during the rainy season.

IT is common knowledge that Russia and Ukraine have been at war since Moscow launched a special military operation on February 24 2022.

Many might not know that both Russia and Ukraine must constituti­onally, hold presidenti­al elections in the same month of March 2024; (Moscow March 15 to 17 and Ukraine March 31).

While Russia is definite that it will hold elections in March, Ukraine — at the instigatio­n of the US that fears that President Zelenskyy will lose — has sought to postpone the elections.

It is fact, not fiction that Zelenskyy will lose the election and that loss will spell doom for US President Joe Biden and his cronies.

The US does not want Ukraine to go to the elections because once Zelenskyy loses, it will open a Pandora’s box on US corruption, unothordox weapon deals, bio labs and how Biden and his close family members, especially Hunter Biden, have been involved in dark world dealings.

US is prepared to compromise the constituti­on of Ukraine for its own gain and Zelenskyy has been so captured that he no longer sees it fit to defend the constituti­on of his country. He is now a puppet of the US and its allies.

Russia under President Putin has nothing to fear. The elections proceed as per constituti­on. The constituti­on must be followed.

Let us call it a tale of two countries at war, holding elections in 2024.

Since the launch of the special military operation, Russia has liberated about a fifth of the country and Zelenskyy who has brazenly become captured by the Biden administra­tion, knows he will lose. The US knows it and they have decided to delay or postpone the elections.

In the aftermath of Zimbabwe’s August 2023 elections, Russia’s election observer mission emphatical­ly stood out for the truth and declared unwavering­ly, that the elections won by Zanu PF had been free and fair.

The observer team said the pre- and post-election periods had been very conducive for elections and that the voting day itself, met standards.

This did not go down well with the European Union, United States and their fellow regime change mongers who wanted to manipulate the result and declare the elections not free and fair.

Despite all pressure, Russia was strong and resolute and remains so, up to today. Elections cannot be free and fair only when a candidate preferred by US and its allies in European Union, wins. NO!

Now Russia goes to the presidenti­al polls in March and it should be in Zimbabwe’s interest to observe the elections. Indeed, Zimbabwe should observe the elections in Moscow, for many reasons.

Firstly, it is very critical to the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC), Zanu PF and all and sundry to get a feel of how Russia does it, given its complex politics and vast voters roll.

Secondly, Russia is also a very big country, which makes distributi­on of the ballot complex.

Russia uses ultra-modern technology

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President Putin
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