U.K. Farmers Fear Foot-And-Mouth Disaster
Second Outbreak Of Highly Contagious Cattle Disease Found In Southern England
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Signs indicate caution at Woolfords farm in Elstead, England, after suspected outbreaks of Foot and Mouth disease occurred in rural areas nearby, Sunday Aug. 5, 2007. (AP Photo/Jane Mingay)
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Interactive Foot-and-Mouth Disease Facts and history of the destructive livestock virus.
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Environment Secretary Hilary Benn says it was confirmed by tests on around 50 cattle within a two-mile protection zone around a farm where the first group of infected cows was found last week.
Authorities slaughtered the first herd of cattle and have begun culling the second group, as they try to find the source of the outbreak.
One theory is recent flooding may have helped spread the virus. Officials also are calling for local footpaths to be closed within the exclusion zone, saying some farmers believe the virus could be carried and spread on the feet of walkers passing through the area.
Farmer Michael Fordham remembers all too well the ravages of the foot-and-mouth epidemic that swept Britain in 2001 — millions of cattle culled and a personal financial burden almost impossible to bear.
So six years later, Fordham, who runs a farm with 90 head of cattle near the town of Uckfield in southern England, was stunned to hear of the latest outbreak of the highly contagious disease.
"I couldn't believe it; it was absolutely staggering to think it could happen again," he said this week. "And on top of all the flooding and bad weather."
Severe floods in June and July across the country had already proved costly for farmers. Fordham found out about the foot-and-mouth outbreak when he switched on the TV after a day spent in the fields doing long-overdue work, such as haymaking, that had been prevented by the rising waters.
Now, the swift ban imposed by the government on all movement of cattle, sheep, goats and pigs nationwide threatens the viability of Fordham's small store at Bradford Farm. He was unable to send selected cattle to the slaughterhouse this week.
At the national level, the Farmers Union said the government's voluntary ban on exports of livestock, meat and milk — imposed Saturday, a day after the discovery of the disease in at least two animals at a farm in Surrey, southwest of London — would have cost millions of pounds already.
The European Union, which was accused of retaining its 2001 ban for longer than necessary, announced its own ban on Monday and each week it lasts is expected to cost Britain millions more. A long-term ban is also likely to cause the domestic price of British meat to plummet, further crimping farmers' profits.
"We know from long and bitter experience that a ban on exports leads to very low prices," said National Farmers' Union spokesman Anthony Gibson. "Further price cuts could be the last straw for an awful lot of people."
The EU attempted to ease some of the economic impact by exempting from its ban some products it deems safe, including those produced before July 15 that were treated in a way to inactivate the virus and those manufactured in Great Britain but derived from animals reared outside its territory.
Exports of British beef resumed only in May of last year, reversing a 10-year ban that followed the discovery of a link between bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or mad cow disease, and the variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease in humans.
And many farmers are still recovering from the domestic effects of the outbreak of foot-and-mouth in 2001, when 7 million animals were slaughtered, many on pyres, costing the economy around 8.5 billion pounds.
"By its nature, farming is a long-term business, with sheep flocks just coming out of the after-effects of 2001," said Malcolm Corbett, the head of the National Farmers Union. "This is a real body blow to the livestock industry."
Alongside domestic sales and exports, tourism could be hit by an ongoing alert.
Former Prime Minister Tony Blair's decision to shut down large swathes of the countryside and appeal for people to stay in the cities to avoid spreading the disease was blamed for worsening the 2001 outbreak's impact on tourism.
This time, while keeping a tight reign on livestock movements, Prime Minister Gordon Brown has stressed the countryside remains open to tourists.
Whether the current scare reaches the proportions of the previous epidemic depends on successful containment.
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- "Spectrum 108"
I don't quite know what you mean by 'Brit commoners', but it's flattering to imagine that, in your mind at least, my remarks represent all of them.
'A good laugh', as you disparagingly put it, is sometimes the best defence against the Mr Angrys of this world - including conspiracy addicts with simplistic views who call other people stupid. - Reply to this comment
- OK- not sure what either of your comments mean but this is really startling.
I'm afraid to eat anything these days. First from Latin America, then China, now Great Britain.
I really fear for the farmers because this is definately something hard to come back from. - Reply to this comment
- "Prinzowhales"
As a Briton, my reaction when you lecture us is like that of the driver who gets tail-gated -
1)There's a man who wants to drive my car as
well as his own.
2)Forget it, his anger is his problem,
not mine.
But keep up the entertainment.
Your early-morning postings reach here just in time for a laugh over a lunchtime pint.
- Reply to this comment
- Brits, Thank Mr. Brown and HM's government for releasing this plague upon you! Just like the last one--right from a lab where government and private enterprise work together to screw over the people.
- Reply to this comment
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