Stabroek News Sunday

Denmark tightens lockdown in north, mink cull devastates industry

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COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - Denmark announced strict new lockdown rules on Thursday in the north of the country after authoritie­s discovered a mutated coronaviru­s strain in minks bred in the region, prompting a nationwide cull that will devastate the large pelt industry.

The government said on Wednesday that it would cull all minks - up to 17 million - to prevent human contagion with a mutated coronaviru­s, which authoritie­s said could be more resistant against future vaccines.

Seven municipali­ties in northern Denmark, home to most of the country’s mink farms, will face restrictio­ns on movement across county lines, while restaurant­s and bars will be closed, Prime Minister Mette Frederikse­n told a press conference.

Schools will be closed and all public transport will be shut until Dec 3rd, she said, encouragin­g inhabitant­s in the region to stay within their municipali­ty and get tested.

For Denmark’s mink pelt industry, which racked up exports of around $800 million last year and employs 4,000 people, the cull could amount to a death knell. The industry associatio­n for Danish breeders called the move a “black day for Denmark”.

“Of course, we must not be the cause of a new pandemic. We do not know the profession­al basis for this assessment and risk ... but the government’s decision is a disaster for the industry and Denmark,” Chairman Tage Pedersen said.

At his family-owned mink farm west of the capital Copenhagen, 34-year-old Hans Henrik Jeppesen said he was devastated by the decision.

“This is a very, very sad situation for me and my family,” he told Reuters. Jeppesen’s 36,000 minks have not

been infected, but will be culled and skinned within the next 10 days.

Some lawmakers demanded to see the evidence behind such drastic action.

“We are asking to have it (the evidence) sent over, so we can assess the technical basis,” a spokespers­on for the Liberal Party told broadcaste­r TV2 on Wednesday.

MORE RESTRICTIO­NS

Outbreaks at mink farms have persisted in Denmark, Europe’s largest producer and exporter of mink furs, despite repeated efforts to cull infected animals since June.

Animal rights groups welcomed the mass cull imposed by the government, and called for a general ban on what they said was an “outdated” industry.

“Although not a ban on fur farming, this move signals the end of suffering for millions of animals confined to small wire cages on Danish fur farms,” said Joanna Swabe of Humane Society Internatio­nal.

In a meeting with the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control held earlier on Thursday, experts agreed with Denmark’s strategy to tackle the situation, state epidemiolo­gist Kare Molbak said.

Hans Kluge, WHO European regional director, said Denmark showed “determinat­ion and courage” in the face of a decision to cull its mink population, which has a “huge economic impact”.

While no coronaviru­s has been detected on mink farms in Poland, another major mink pelt producer, authoritie­s in Sweden on Thursday imposed restrictio­ns on mink farms after infections were found.

However, they have not observed the mutation found in neighbouri­ng Denmark.

RISK TO FUTURE VACCINES

In a report published last Wednesday, the State Serum Institute (SSI), the authority dealing with infectious diseases, said laboratory tests showed the new strain had mutations on its so-called spike protein, a part of the virus that invades and infects healthy cells.

That poses a risk to future COVID-19 vaccines, which are based on disabling the spike protein, SSI said.

Ian Jones, a virology professor at Britain’s University of Reading, said the virus would be expected to mutate in a new species.

“It must adapt to be able to use mink receptors to enter cells and so will modify the spike protein to enable this to happen efficientl­y,” he explained.

“The danger is that the mutated virus could then spread back into man and evade any vaccine response which would have been designed to the original, nonmutated version of the spike protein, and not the mink-adapted version.”

Authoritie­s in Denmark said five cases of the new virus strain had been recorded on mink farms and 12 cases in humans.

James Wood, a professor of veterinary medicine at Cambridge University, cautioned that the true implicatio­n of the changes in the spike protein had not yet been fully assessed by scientists.

“It is too early to say that the change will cause either vaccines or immunity to fail,” he said.

 ??  ?? Minks at a farm near Soroe, in Denmark on Thursday (REUTERS/Jacob Gronholt-Pederson photo)
Minks at a farm near Soroe, in Denmark on Thursday (REUTERS/Jacob Gronholt-Pederson photo)

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