Already known for its tough biosecurity regulations, Australia has
increased its vigilance to prevent the devastating African Swine
Fever (ASF) from hitting its A$5.4-billion ($3.65-billion) pork
industry.
The woman, 45, was stopped on Saturday after she flew into Sydney
with 4.6 kg of pork and smaller amounts of quail, squid, pate, raw
eggs and garlic in her luggage, authorities said in a statement.
"In the midst of what is potentially the biggest animal disease
event the world has seen, it beggars belief that someone would
deliberately attempt to bring pork meat past our border,"
Agriculture Minister Bridget McKenzie said in a statement, referring
to the outbreak that has ravaged pig stocks worldwide.
Rather than levy a fine, and because of the large amount of
undeclared food, immigration officials ordered the woman to return
to Vietnam, making her the first person denied entry to Australia
under the tougher law.
Officials did not give details of the woman apart from her
nationality and age, and Reuters was not immediately able to
approach her for comment.
In the past six months, Australia has stepped up surveillance of
packages from Belgium, Slovakia, Serbia and most Asian countries in
an attempt to keep out the swine fever.
[to top of second column] |
A total of 27 tonnes of undeclared food has been detected entering
Australia, 15% of which had traces of ASF, said Margo Andrae, chief
executive of Pork Australia, a producer-owned body.
ASF, with mortality rates as high as 100%, can be spread via raw
pork and people's shoes and clothing. The infection has killed a
quarter of the world's pigs since spreading to Asia from Europe
about a year ago, Andrae added.
"There's no vaccine ... so it can wipe out the entire herd," she
said, adding that the other raw animal products carried by the woman
also posed a biosecurity risk.
Australia's stringent biosecurity laws have in the past ensnared
some high-profile figures.
In 2015, Australia gave Hollywood actor Johnny Depp two days to
return his two pet dogs to the United States for failing to declare
them to customs.
(Reporting by Byron Kaye; Editing by Karishma Singh, Robert Birsel)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |