The discovery of infected pigs in Zhengzhou city, in central Henan
province, about 1,000 km (625 miles) from the first case ever
reported in China, pushed pig prices lower on Friday and stirred
animal health experts' fears of fresh outbreaks - as well as food
safety concerns among the public.
Though often fatal to pigs, with no vaccine available, ASF does not
affect humans, according to the United Nations' Food and Agriculture
Organisation (FAO).
ASF has been detected in Russia and Eastern Europe as well as
Africa, though never before in East Asia, is one of the most
devastating diseases to affect swine herds. It occurs among
commercial herds and wild boars, is transmitted by ticks and direct
contact between animals, and can also travel via contaminated food,
animal feed, and international travelers.
WH Group said in a statement that Zhengzhou city authorities had
ordered a temporary six-week closure of the slaughterhouse after
some 30 hogs died of the highly contagious illness on Thursday. The
plant is one of 15 controlled by China's largest pork processor
Henan Shuanghui Investment & Development, a subsidiary of WH Group.
Zhengzhou city authorities have banned all movement of pigs and pork
products in and out of the affected area for the same six weeks.
Shuanghui said in a separate statement on Friday it culled 1,362
pigs at the slaughterhouse after the infection was discovered.
The infected pigs had traveled by road from a live market in Jiamusi
city in China's northeastern province of Heilongjiang, through areas
of high pig density to central Henan. Another northeastern province,
Liaoning, has culled thousands of pigs since a first case of ASF was
reported two weeks ago.
The pigs' long journey, and the vast distance between the two cases,
stoked concerns about the spread of disease across China's vast pig
herd - and potentially into Japan, the Korean Peninsula and other
parts of Asia.
The race in recent years to build vast pig farms in China's
north-eastern cornbelt has also increased the number of pigs being
transported across country from farm and market to slaughter and
processing in the south.
That underlines the challenge for the government in trying to
contain infection.
"The areas of concern now involve multiple Chinese provinces and
heighten the likelihood of further cases," the Swine Health
Information Center, a U.S. research body, said in a note.
South Korea doesn't import pork or pigs from China, but the
government has stepped up checks at airports on travelers from the
country, and recommended visitors there avoid farms and live
markets, the Ministry of Agriculture said on Friday.
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In Japan, authorities have ramped up checks on travelers from the
affected regions, its Ministry of Agriculture said. It bans imports
of raw pork from China.
A second outbreak of deadly swine flu has been discovered in China:
https://reut.rs/2vXxkPd
'A LITTLE SCARED'
Pig prices dropped on Friday amid concerns about the outbreak on
demand for pork, a staple in China's diet with retail sales topping
$840 billion each year. Analysts said farmers may also rush to sell
their hogs fearing the infection may spread to their herds.
National hog prices were at 13.97 yuan ($2.03) per kilogram on
Friday, down 0.7 percent from Thursday, according to consultancy
China-America Commodity Data Analytics.
In central Henan, Hubei and Hunan provinces, prices on average fell
more heavily, down 1.4 percent.
"In the short term, there will be a pig-selling spree," said Alice
Xuan, analyst with Shanghai JC Intelligence Co Ltd.
As Zhengzhou city froze pig movements, Heilongjiang authorities were
also investigating whether the pigs involved were infected in the
northeastern province bordering Russia.
Meanwhile comments on the country's Twitter-like Weibo highlighted
worries about the safety of eating pork, the nation's favorite meat.
The relationship between people and pigs in China is close, with the
Chinese word for "home" made up of the character "roof" over the
character for "pig".
Posts expressing concern that infected meat may enter the food
stream and fears about whether it is safe to eat pork garnered the
most attention.
"A little scared. What will happen if you eat (pork)?" said one
poster.
WH Group said on Friday it did not expect the closure of the
Zhengzhou slaughterhouse to have any adverse material impact on
business, helping its shares rise 0.8 percent after slumping 10
percent on Thursday. Shuanghui shares were up 0.67 percent on Friday
afternoon.
The Zhengzhou operation accounts for an "insignificant" portion of
WH Group's operations, the company said, adding it does not expect
any disruption to supply of pork and related products as a result of
the temporary closure. On Thursday, Shuanghui said it had diverted
sales orders to other operations.
(Reporting by Josephine Mason; Additional reporting by Jianfeng
Zhou, Hallie Gu and Ben Blanchard in BEIJING, Luoyan Liu in
SHANGHAI, Jane Chung in SEOUL and Yuka Obayashi in TOKYO; Editing by
Kenneth Maxwell)
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