Germany has new African swine fever case in farm pigs, state reports
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[June 06, 2024]
HAMBURG (Reuters) -A case of African swine fever (ASF) has been
confirmed in farm pigs in east Germany, authorities said on Thursday.
It was confirmed on a pig breeding farm in Greifswald in the eastern
state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, the state's agriculture ministry said.
China and a series of other pork buyers banned imports of German pig
meat in September 2020 after the first ASF case was confirmed in wild
animals, with several cases in farm animals following.
Discoveries on farms will make it harder for Germany to get the export
bans lifted, analysts say. China's import ban remains in force.
The disease is not dangerous to humans but it is fatal to pigs. Many
countries impose bans on pork from regions suffering from the disease,
distorting world food trade.
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Wild boar coming into Germany from
Poland are believed to have spread the disease to the country's
eastern states of Brandenburg and Saxony, where several thousand
cases in wild animals have occurred.
The German government has been seeking to contain
and eradicate ASF in the east partly by reducing the wild boar
population.
But the country’s large number of wild boar, which roam over large
distances, has made containment difficult.
(Reporting by Michael Hogan; editing by Jason Neely, Kirsten
Donovan)
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