Cape Times

Bid to lift livestock auction ban

Emerging farmers turn to high court to fight restrictiv­e foot-and-mouth control measures

- LISA ISAACS lisa.isaacs@inl.co.za

AN APPLICATIO­N by a group of emerging farmers to lift a national ban on livestock auctions has been remanded for an urgent date.

The farmers took the matter to the North Gauteng High Court yesterday, after the ban was implemente­d by the Department of Agricultur­e, Land Reform and Rural Developmen­t last year when foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) was detected in Limpopo.

The applicatio­n is for an urgent interim order declaring that the applicants be allowed to proceed with auctions in their respective areas of business outside Limpopo, pending the finalisati­on of veterinary investigat­ions and implementa­tion of control measures.

Last week, the National Red Meat Producers Organisati­on said the situation was “untenable” and put a damper on the red meat industry, prohibited normal price forming mechanisms, and had a negative impact on commercial and emerging producers.

The Department of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries, meanwhile, said that four further cases of FMD had been reported since mid-December – three in December and one case reported in the first week of this month.

The total number of confirmed positive locations has risen to 15.

“More than 130 points were identified with possible links to specific auctions and known affected properties. Follow-up investigat­ions and collection of samples were already performed on 95 of these points and precaution­ary quarantine has been lifted on 44 properties that have been proven negative for FMD.

“All properties where the disease has been confirmed have been placed under quarantine and cloven-hoofed animals are not allowed to move off the quarantine­d properties. Guidelines and applicatio­n procedures have been finalised for animals on FMD quarantine­d properties to undergo early slaughter at designated abattoirs with specific conditions to prevent the spread of FMD.

“FMD does not affect people, therefore meat and milk from infected livestock is safe for human consumptio­n,” the department said.

The prohibitio­n on the gathering of cloven hoofed animals from two or more properties resulted after veterinary authoritie­s identified that the short-term congregati­on and redistribu­tion of cloven-hoofed animals played an integral part in the spread of the disease in this outbreak, as all the affected properties had been linked directly or indirectly to auctions.

 ??  ?? Siya Kolisi
Siya Kolisi

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