Indonesia aiming to get foot and mouth
disease under control by year-end
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[August 02, 2022]
JAKARTA (Reuters) - Indonesia is
aiming to get its foot and mouth disease (FMD)outbreak under control by
the end of this year, a government official said on Tuesday, as it
forges ahead with a programme to vaccinate millions of livestock.
More than 455,000 livestock in 23 of the archipelago's 37 provinces have
been infected with the disease as of Tuesday, according to government
data, with 4,720 animals killed by the disease and 7,561 more
slaughtered.
Cattle producing countries including Australia and New Zealand have
raised their guard against FMD after infections were found in
Indonesia's holiday island of Bali.
"We hope by the end of this year, we can control the situation by having
the number of cases reported reduced from time to time," Wiku Adisasmito,
spokesperson for the government task force handling the outbreak, told a
briefing.
"We would also reassure the international community that Indonesia is
capable of controlling the outbreak."
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A Marine and Agricultural Food Security officer inspects a cow at a
cattle shop to prevent the spread of foot and mouth disease in
Tanjung Priok, North Jakarta, Indonesia, June 24, 2022. REUTERS/Ajeng
Dinar Ulfiana
FMD is highly transmissible and
causes lesions and lameness in cattle, sheep, goats and other
cloven-hoofed animals, but does not affect humans.
Indonesia has vaccinated nearly 900,000 livestock since launching
its inoculation programme in June and has secured 3 million doses so
far. Authorities have announced plans to buy millions more doses by
year-end.
The country has also stepped up biosecurity measures such as
sanitation foot mats and disinfectant sprayers at several airports,
to ensure international and domestic travellers can prevent the
virus from spreading, Wiku said.
(Reporting by Bernadette Christina; Editing by Martin Petty)
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