Cape Times

TheBrief COUNTRY’S POULTRY FARMERS WILL NOT BE COMPENSATE­D FOR CULLING ‘AT RISK’

- Banele Ginindza

THE DEPARTMENT of Agricultur­e, Land Reform and Rural Developmen­t (DALRRD) has confirmed it will not compensate farmers for close to R1.5 billion of losses incurred in the culling of birds possibly contaminat­ed by avian influenza early this year. In a brief communiqué, the director of Animal Health at DALRRD, Mpho Maja, said: “Animal Health will not offer incentive agreements in the foreseeabl­e future for the destructio­n of healthy but at-risk commercial chickens.” This is contrary to the World Organisati­on for Animal Health, which has recommende­d that government­s compensate farmers, because they are “a key incentive to support early detection” of bird flu. Analysts said the move may result in farmers not declaring outbreaks of poultry disease at their farms and instead elect to re-package poultry for the meat market to mitigate against the extraordin­ary losses incurred when birds are culled at the directive of the department. Bird flu outbreaks result in the compulsory culling of millions of chickens, many of them healthy birds that have been near or in contact with infected ones. This is a necessary measure to contain the disease and prevent it spreading, but it can result in financial disaster for farmers when some or all of their flocks have to be destroyed. An earlier communiqué by the department was that with the outbreak of the Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza, monetary incentives were offered by the Directorat­e of Animal Health for the destructio­n of healthy but at-risk commercial chickens as described in the “Final Draft: Compensati­on and Incentive Guidelines for Chickens with regard to Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza”. In the 2017 outbreak in South Africa, more than 2 million chickens were culled, and the total so far this year is nearly 2.7 million birds in the broiler and egg industries. This is less than 2 percent of the national flock, but it is a sizeable number for many individual farmers. “Around the world, various compensati­on schemes are in effect, both to support farmers who have suffered a financial blow and to encourage reporting of outbreaks so that speedy control measures can be put in place,” said a highly placed official at the South African Poultry Associatio­n. |

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