China
warns pig trade against African swine fever cover-ups as Taiwan
concerns grow
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[January 04, 2019]
BEIJING/TAIPEI (Reuters) - China has warned
the country's pork industry that covering up cases of African swine
fever is a crime, days after a dead pig was found on a Taiwanese beach
prompting Taipei to claim Beijing was not sharing accurate information
on the disease.
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China's animal husbandry and veterinary affairs bureau is stepping
up investigation and punishment of illegal activity in the pig
industry, said a statement published on the Ministry of Agriculture
and Rural Affairs website on Friday.
Failing to report deaths and privately slaughtering and selling sick
or dead pigs would be pursued under criminal law, it said, and
compensation of 1,200 yuan ($175) for each pig culled was sufficient
incentive for farmers to report the disease.
In the worst epidemic of the disease ever seen, China has confirmed
about 100 cases of African swine fever across 23 provinces since
August last year. The disease, for which there is neither cure nor
vaccine, is deadly to pigs but does not harm people.
But many experts believe it is even worse than has been reported,
and Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen urged Beijing last month to "not
conceal" information about the disease.
Tsai raised the issue again in a New Year's speech after a dead pig
was found on a beach on Taiwan's Kinmen island, a half-hour ferry
ride from the east coast of China. The pig has since been confirmed
to have the African swine fever virus, while another dead pig was
found on a nearby island on Friday, Taiwan's official Central News
Agency reported.
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"During our recent efforts to prevent an African swine fever
epidemic, China's government has never followed the relevant
agreements and provided Taiwan with accurate, real-time reports
about the epidemic situation," she said.
China has repeatedly said that the disease has been effectively
dealt with and is under control. The Ministry of Agriculture and
Rural Affairs did not immediately respond to a fax seeking comment
on Friday.
The dead animals found on the Taiwanese islands have stoked fears
that Taiwan's pigs could soon become infected with the disease.
Taiwan's herd of 5.39 million pigs is tiny compared with China's 700
million, but pork is the most popular meat in both places and
domestic production in Taiwan reduces its need for imports of the
staple meat.
(Reporting by Dominique Patton in BEIJING and Yi-Mou Lee in TAIPEI;
Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)
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