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UN
donates millions to fight foot-and-mouth
IRIN News
January 18, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57119
BULAWAYO, 18
Jan 2007 (IRIN) - A US$10.3 million donation by the United Nations
to Zimbabwe for combating foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) will be insufficient
unless the ruling ZANU-PF party government also contributes to the
fight against the cattle sickness, the country's veterinarians said.
The recurrence
of FMD has become an almost annual event for the past seven years,
and in 2001 led to the European Union (EU) cancelling its 9,100mt
beef quota, worth an annual US$38 million or about 4 percent of
foreign currency earnings, because of Zimbabwe's failure to control
livestock diseases.
"Government
should pour in more money and intensify its efforts to eradicate
cattle diseases," said local veterinarian Luke Streak. "The
traditional outbreak of foot-and-mouth ... especially [in areas]
... close to the border with Botswana, remains a serious threat
that should be brought under control if our national herd is to
be revived and preserved. The [UN] money is just too little, considering
the scale of the problem."
Small-scale
farmers have seen their livestock decimated by outbreaks of highly
contagious FMD, a viral disease carried by wild buffalo, which does
not affect humans but has devastating effects on animals with cloven
hooves, such as cattle, pigs, sheep, goats and deer, as well as
anthrax, a disease caused by the bacillus anthracis, which can also
infect humans.
The government's
failure to address bovine diseases has reduced Zimbabwe's national
herd from 1.4 million head of cattle in 2000 to about 250,000 at
present.
Mandlenkosi
Dube, a farmer in the village of Maphisa, near the Botswana border
in Matabeleland South Province, said he had a flourishing herd of
30 cattle five years ago, but since the onset of FMD and other livestock
diseases, he has been left with just five.
"Like most
people here, I rely on my livestock for survival. For instance,
for me to be able to pay school fees for my three children I have
to sell one cow or at least three goats. Also, we use the cattle
for draught power [to plough] ... But there has been a problem of
cattle diseases over the years that have killed our animals,"
he told IRIN.
"One neighbour
of mine is now left with only one from a herd of ten, in two years
... This has grossly compromised our livelihoods because ... even
if I am broke, I can no longer sell any other beasts because they
are now [too] few," Dube said.
An outbreak
of FMD last year in Botswana was blamed on Zimbabwe: a shortage
of dipping chemicals, leaving animals more vulnerable to infection;
and the break-up of large commercial farms after President Robert
Mugabe's fast-track land reform began in 2000, which redistributed
white farmland to landless blacks, with one of the consequences
a failure to maintain fencing, allowing the disease to spread through
contact between domestic animals and wild animals.
Zimbabwe's economic
meltdown, with inflation soaring to 1,281 percent and unemployment
levels touching 80 percent, has brought an upswing in unofficial
cross-border trade and cattle rustling. Botswana police and veterinary
officers along the border have consistently accused small-scale
butchers in Botswana of fuelling stock-theft and smuggling by buying
stolen Zimbabwean animals at give-away prices.
The 2006 outbreak
of FMD in Botswana forced the Lobatse and Francistown abattoirs
to shut down and recall beef shipments en route to Europe, Reunion
and South Africa. The losses to the beef industry were not disclosed,
although the chief executive of the Botswana Meat Commission, Motshudi
Raborokgwe, said at the time the outbreak threatened the survival
of the industry.
Since the 1950s,
Botswana's national herd has increased from a few hundred thousand
to three million head of cattle, and the annual beef quota exported
to the EU is worth over US$100 million.
Zimbabwe's veterinary
services department said it would use the United Nations Food and
Agriculture Organisation (FAO) donation to import vaccines and dipping
chemicals, to be distributed mainly in southern Zimbabwe, where
new cases of FMD and anthrax have been reported.
Departmental
spokesperson Stuart Hargreaves said the acute shortage of foreign
exchange had hamstrung the government's efforts to provide communities
and farmers with the necessary livestock vaccines, which was allowing
outbreaks of bovine diseases. According to department officials,
cattle in various parts of the country had gone for more than six
months without being vaccinated or dipped.
The most acutely
affected region is Matabeleland South, bordering Botswana and South
Africa, a mainly cattle-rearing province. Hargreaves said the government
was doing its best to procure dipping chemicals to avoid the unnecessary
loss of animals.
"The problem
is the shortage of foreign currency, but we are working hard to
get all the chemicals so that we can revive our national heard as
a matter of urgency. We have lost hundreds of animals due to recurrent
droughts, and FMD and Anthrax remain our major worries, hence our
redoubled efforts to rectify these problems," he told IRIN.
The state-controlled
Herald newspaper reported this week that in the last two months
more than 200 cattle had died from anthrax in Masvingo Province,
bordering Mozambique, in the southeast of the country. The Cattle
Producers Association (CPA) said uncontrolled movements of cattle
remained the major cause of FMD and anthrax outbreaks.
"FMD continues
to haunt us; veterinary services' ability to source vaccine from
other countries is directly related to the availability of foreign
currency to pay our debts, and this has been a major problem,"
a recent CPA report pointed out. "However, vaccination is not
the total solution to FMD control and, until the fundamental issue
of illegal cattle movement is addressed, Zimbabwe will continue
to see the recurrence of FMD."
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