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ZIMBABWE:
Cocktail of livestock diseases stretch veterinary services
IRIN
News
July 19, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=54699
HARARE - Hopes
that Zimbabwe could resume beef exports to the lucrative European
Union (EU) market before the end of this year have been dashed by
a widespread outbreak of highly contagious diseases the veterinary
services are struggling to contain.
Harare's beef exports to the EU were suspended in August 2001 following
repeated outbreaks of foot-and-mouth. The principal director in
the department of veterinary services, Stuart Hargreaves, said chronic
foreign currency shortages had defeated the department's efforts
to control the resurgence of foot-and-mouth, anthrax and various
other tick-borne ailments.
"We need about US$2 million to run control programmes for the rest
of this year," he noted. Lumpy skin disease, for example, was affecting
each province, but Zimbabwe was competing with better-off neighbours
to import vaccines form a single South African supplier.
Despite the crumbling of services, the department has not given
up on its disease control efforts. Hargreaves said the fencing off
two national parks had just been completed to prevent the mingling
of wildlife - especially buffaloes that carry foot-and-mouth - with
domestic animals.
The chairperson of the Cattle Producers Association, Maryna Erasmus,
told IRIN the current disease explosion was a result of illegal
cattle movements that characterised the chaotic government-backed
commercial farm invasions that began in 2000. He said diseases were
introduced into new areas or reinfected previously cleansed zones.
"There is a countrywide outbreak of tick-borne diseases such as
heart-water, red water, gall sickness, lumpy skin disease, three-day-stiff
sickness and anthrax. Some farmers can handle these ailments, but
they do not have the vaccines. It is worse in the communal areas
because dip-tanks have not been working for two years in some areas.
Farmers who can afford basic vaccines cannot find them. Government
blames all this on foreign currency shortages," said Erasmus.
Before the suspension of the EU beef quota, Zimbabwe earned US$38
million annually from its beef exports, representing 4 percent of
the country's total foreign currency earnings. Repeated efforts
to revive EU sales have failed although trade deals in other beef
products remains operational.
Cold Storage Commission marketing board member Lovegot Tendengu
told IRIN that the loss of the beef export agreement was a major
blow to the country. He added that it would be impossible to revive
the industry until the epidemics were brought under control.
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