China says new African swine fever outbreak reported in Inner Mongolia www.reuters.com
BEIJING (Reuters) - China said on Monday it has confirmed a new outbreak of African swine fever in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region of northern China, as authorities struggle to contain the highly contagious disease.
The Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs said a slaughterhouse in the city of Hohhot reported the outbreak, adding that four pigs were infected with, and two had died from, African swine fever.
The world’s top pork producer has seen a steady stream of new outbreaks since the first case was reported in early August. Authorities have banned the transport of live hogs and pig products from regions bordering provinces where African swine fever has been reported, shut live markets and banned the use of feed derived from pig blood in order to contain the disease.
But a lack of manpower and financial resources at the local levels has hampered those efforts.
African swine fever is a devastating disease that can cause hemorrhaging in the skin and internal organs and death for swine in two to 10 days.
Though it is not harmful to humans, there is no vaccine and it has many possible ways for transmission including direct contact between animals, animal feed and people traveling from one place to another.
Reporting by Min Zhang and Se Young Lee; Editing by Clarence Fernandez and Christian Schmollinger
Published Date:2018-09-25