Foot and mouth disease casts shadow over Eid festival in Indonesia
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[July 06, 2022]
By Johan Purnomo
JAKARTA (Reuters) - An outbreak of foot and
mouth disease in Indonesia threatens to disrupt a ritual of slaughtering
animals to mark the festival of Eid al-Adha this year, with livestock
traders in the world's largest Muslim-majority nation bemoaning low
sales.
Eid Al-Adha, known as the "Festival of Sacrifice", is one of the main
holidays in the Islamic calendar and this year falls on July 9.
In the lead up to celebrations, makeshift pens housing cows and goats
typically appear around busy thoroughfares in the Indonesian capital and
around the country. Traditionally, devout Muslims slaughter the animals
and share the meat with the poor.
But this year the spread of foot and mouth disease (FMD), a contagious
viral disease that impacts cattle, sheep, goats and pigs, has
significantly dampened sales.
"This year is a year of loss for us," said Jamal Lulay, a trader in West
Java who has only sold 50 cows this year.
"Before COVID, we could sell up to 330 cows, and during COVID it was
around 170... This year sales have dropped drastically."
Indonesia had launched a nationwide livestock vaccination programme in
an attempt curb the outbreak that began this May.
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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
More than 317,000 animals have been
infected in 21 Indonesian provinces, largely on the most populated
islands of Java and Sumatra, with more than 3,400 animals culled,
according to government data.
While the disease can be lethal for animals, it is not generally
considered a threat to human health.
"People's enthusiasm for sacrifice has not been
diminished, but they are more worried about the health (of the
animals)," said Muhammad Husein al Bana, a livestock trader in
Jakarta.
Until this May, the Southeast Asian country had been free of FMD
since 1986, a status recognised by the World Organisation for Animal
Health in 1990.
"Ultimately it is the consumer's decision," said Iskandar Saputra, a
Jakarta buyer still willing to take the risk.
"I think the cows sold here are safe and healthy."
(Writing by Kate Lamb; Editing by Ed Davies and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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