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			 The highly contagious fever has killed around a million pigs 
			worldwide and recently spread rapidly across China, which has 
			reported 80 cases since early August. 
 In footage shown on state-run Vietnam Television (VTV), officials 
			covered from head to toe in protective clothing were seen taking 
			samples from dead pigs and spraying corpses before burying them in a 
			large pit in the ground.
 
 "The fever is only 150 kilometers away from our border, so it's 
			necessary to understand the risk and danger...if it reaches our 27 
			millions pigs," said Tong Xuan Chinh, vice head of the agriculture 
			ministry's livestock department.
 
			
			 
			Vietnam has more than 27 millions pigs, most of which are consumed 
			domestically, with pork accounting for three quarters of total meat 
			consumption in the Southeast Asian nation of 95 million people, 
			Chinh said.
 "If this fever infects our pigs, it will be a major hit to the 
			economy, society, environment and food security," Chinh said. He 
			added that authorities were tightly controlling the transportation 
			of pigs and pork products from China and had banned pork products 
			from other infected countries such as Poland and Hungary.
 
			
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			Last month, China reported outbreaks of African swine fever in 
			several provinces, including Yunnan, a border province with Vietnam.
 There is also a danger of the disease spreading into Vietnam through 
			smuggled pigs of unknown origin. Smuggling is a regular occurrence, 
			especially in the northern border provinces with China, the 
			agriculture ministry said last week.
 
 Authorities in Vietnam have destroyed 324 pigs and nearly 17 tonnes 
			of pork products that have been smuggled or which do not have clear 
			origins in 63 cases since August, the ministry said in a statement 
			on its website.
 
 (Reporting by Mai Nguyen; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)
 
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