
Italy to kill 1,000 pigs in swine fever outbreak (Credits:Google)
- Two cases of African swine fever discovered on farm in Rome’s Lazio region.
- Italian health officials say 1,000 pigs will have to be slaughtered.
- Italy is the seventh biggest pork producer in the European Union.
Italy: Officials announced Friday that a thousand pigs will be slaughtered after two instances of swine fever were discovered on a farm in Rome’s Lazio region, raising fears of a blow to the country’s pork industry.
“We have to slaughter all the pigs in the contaminated area very quickly,” Angelo Ferrari, tasked with managing the crisis, told AGI news agency.
The local health agency estimated 1,000 pigs would have to be culled to stem the spread, he said.
“The sooner we act decisively and incisively, the greater our hope that the commercial damage will be reduced,” he said.
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Italy, with about 8.9 million pigs, is the seventh biggest pork producer in the European Union, representing an eight-billion-euro ($9.1 billion) industry, according to the agricultural association Confagricoltura.
The two case of African swine fever detected in Lazio are the first among farmed pigs in Italy. Before that, cases were detected in wild boar in January in northern Italy, then in the Lazio region.
African swine fever (ASF) does not affect humans but is contagious and fatal for pigs and their wild relatives and an outbreak is potentially devastating for the pork industry, experts say.
A 2018 outbreak in China — the world’s largest pork producer — caused millions of pigs to be slaughtered to stop the spread.
The disease has existed in Africa for decades. In a December 3 report on the virus, the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE) said ASF had been reported in 32 countries in five world regions since January 2020.
In Italy, it has been endemic on the island of Sardinia since first appearing in 1978.
In western Europe, the virus was reported in Belgium in 2018, prompting China to ban all imports of Belgian pork.
After Germany confirmed its first case in a dead wild boar in 2020, China, Japan and South Korea, alongside Brazil and Argentina, also suspended German pork imports.
Italy’s main agricultural association Coldiretti called on the government last month for the “rapid culling” of boars throughout the country to help stop the spread of the disease.
Images of pigs strolling through Rome’s residential zones and feasting at overflowing trash bins are frequently shared on social media.
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