Country for PR: United Kingdom
Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Wednesday, July 10 2019 - 14:00
AsiaNet
Belgian Meat Office: African Swine Fever: How Belgium Successfully Keeps Its Pork Virus-Free
BRUSSELS, July 10, 2019, /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/--

    Belgium deals well with the outbreak of African swine fever (ASF) in 
September 2018. That is the conclusion of European ASF experts. Belgium 
succeeds in keeping domestic pigs and captive wild pigs free of ASF 
contamination—thus keeping all its pork virus-free and suitable for consumption 
and export. Therefore, trade of Belgian pork is free in the European Union.

    A sketch of Belgium's approach.

    On 13 September 2018, the African swine fever (ASF) virus was confirmed in 
two wild boars in the Belgian municipality Etalle—in a region where only very 
few domestic pigs are kept. The FASFC (Belgium's Federal Agency for the Safety 
of the Food Chain) demarcated an "infected zone", in consultation with the 
European Commission and ministers. To avoid contamination, the few domestic 
pigs in this zone were preventively eradicated between 27 September and 3 
October 2018. The products of these pigs did not enter the food chain and was 
not used in the feed industry.

    https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/944820/Boar.jpg
    https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/944821/Infected_zone_Belgium.jpg

    Swine fever prevention and surveillance in Belgium

    - Registration
    All pig farms must be registered with the Federal Agency for the Safety of 
the Food Chain (FASFC, the competent authority). All pigs must be identified, 
and a register of animal entries and exits must be held. All pig farms are 
registered in a central national database: SANITEL. Belgium currently has 6.2 
million pigs distributed over approx. 7,200 pig farms. 94% of the pigs herd is 
located in the Flanders Region.
    FASFC officers check the registration, infrastructure and hygiene 
obligations. 
    - Prevention
    At national level, a complete prevention plan is set up to avoid the 
spillover of the disease to the domestic pig herd. This involves physical 
barriers, prohibition of assemblies of pigs, access restrictions and 
application of strict biosecurity on farms, prohibition of feeding pigs with 
swill or kitchen waste (even occasionally), cleaning and disinfection of 
vehicles that transport pigs. 
    - Awareness
    In addition to the actions already taken on this issue in the past, a major 
awareness campaign was devised by the FASFC and the Regional Authorities, 
together combined in a National ASF taskforce. 
    - Examination
    Routinely and at all times, pig farmers must call in the farm veterinarian 
three times a year at a minimum interval of 3 months to conduct a clinical 
examination of the pigs on the holding. The veterinarian will use this 
opportunity to check for any symptoms of notifiable diseases and question the 
manager on this issue. 
    - Analyses
    Since ASF is found in the wild in September 2018, pig farm managers must 
immediately call in the farm veterinarian when they observe signs of disease in 
pigs or dead pigs. The veterinarian must examine all the pigs on the holding 
within 24 hours. Even if ASF can be ruled out, the veterinarian must comply 
with FASFC instructions and take 3 blood samples for differential diagnosis 
purposes, among them an ASF test. From 13 September 2018 to 2 April 2019, blood 
samples were taken from 4,081 pigs on 938 farms. All analyses were compliant 
(negative). 
    - Quarantine
    When pigs are introduced into a farm, they undergo a 4-week quarantine 
period before being allowed to mingle with the herd.
Collaboration With Neighboring Countries

    The infected zone is close to Belgium's neighboring countries France, 
Germany and The Netherlands. In order to prevent the disease to spread, the 
four countries joined forces through:

    - Permanent concertation, collaboration and exchange of information 
    - Harmonized and coherent transboundary measures 
    - Cross-level cooperation: Governmental, Local, Firms
    - Result: No Outbreaks In Domestic Swine

    On 17 February 2019 Belgian authorities announced the following results:

    1,539 wild boars were found dead or were eradicated, all of them in the 
infected zone. 
    3,450 analyses were carried out on domestic pigs in the zone with 
reinforced observation; none of them were positive. 
    During the entire outbreak, no domestic pigs were infected.
    Ongoing Efforts

    Even up to today, all stakeholders (farmers, veterinarians, authorities) 
stay alert to insure biosecurity.

    In pig holdings:

    - Enhanced passive surveillance is maintained.
    For wild boars:

    - Intensive search and removal of carcasses. 
    - Ongoing eradication of the wild boar population. 
    - Different fence networks put in place (also on French territory).
    - Conclusion: "Total Transparency Is Essential"

    Jean-François Heymans, Chief Veterinary Officer of the FASFC, concludes: 
"Belgium has initiated a closer collaboration with the neighboring countries 
such as daily communication about the situation and technical meetings between 
wildlife experts of different countries. In addition to the broad, national 
collaboration, we believe that a total transparency towards our neighboring 
countries, other EU Member States and Non-EU Members States is essential for 
the management of ASF in Belgium, Europe and worldwide and to ensure the 
necessary trust between Belgium and its commercial and other partners. 
Therefore, the FASFC continues to inform about the situation and the measures 
taken trough different platforms of communication."

    About Belgian Meat Office 
    Belgian Meat Office coordinates pork and beef export activities. The meat 
export agency was founded in 2003 under the Flemish Centre for Agricultural and 
Fisheries Marketing (VLAM) umbrella.

    More Info 
    www.europeanpork.eu

    Press Contact 
    Joris Coenen, 
    Marketing & Communication Officer Belgian Meat Office
    0032-476-945-486


SOURCE: VLAM/Belgian Meat Office
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