Thursday, 9 April 2015

UN vaccinates Syrian refugee animals in Lebanon against goat plague





The UN has launched an emergency vaccination campaign against lumpy skin disease and goat plague among animals brought to Lebanon by refugees fleeing the Syrian conflict, a report said Thursday.



Some of the 1.5 million refugees have brought with them large numbers of unvaccinated sheep, goats, cattle and other animals, raising concerns over the spread of high impact animal diseases, the UN's food agency said.


The Rome-based Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) said it was carrying out the second phase of "a campaign to immunise as much of the country's livestock as possible, with a target of vaccinating all animals."


"As many as 70,000 cows and around 900,000 sheep and goats could be exposed to transboundary diseases if left untreated, according to Lebanon's ministry for agriculture," the report said.


The campaign aims to reduce the number of animals dying from preventable diseases in rural areas in particular, where natural resources are already strained by the spill-over effects from the humanitarian crisis in Syria.


Some of the animal diseases are highly contagious and can spread extremely rapidly, causing high mortality and morbidity in animals, with serious socio-economic consequences and possible public health repercussions, FAO said.


"The three most prevalent animal diseases detected in Lebanon include lumpy skin disease, foot-and-mouth disease and peste des petits ruminants, also known as 'goat plague', which is highly contagious," it said.


FAO and the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE) pledged earlier this month to eradicate sheep and goat plague—which causes fever, mouth sores, diarrhoea and often leads to a swift death—by 2030.


The stress being placed on Lebanon's "natural resources and food production systems is particularly worrying... with more people than ever before now in need of animal protein and milk," FAO said.


According to the UN, Lebanon now has the highest per capita ratio of refugees in the world, accounting for a quarter of the population—and their arrival has seen unemployment figures double.


The vaccination project—funded by Britain's Department for International Development (DFID)—follows an initial programme last year which was credited with stopping any widespread animal disease outbreaks.



© 2015 AFP


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The UN has launched an emergency vaccination campaign against lumpy skin disease and goat plague among animals brought to Lebanon by refugees fleeing the Syrian conflict, a report said Thursday.



Some of the 1.5 million refugees have brought with them large numbers of unvaccinated sheep, goats, cattle and other animals, raising concerns over the spread of high impact animal diseases, the UN's food agency said.


The Rome-based Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) said it was carrying out the second phase of "a campaign to immunise as much of the country's livestock as possible, with a target of vaccinating all animals."


"As many as 70,000 cows and around 900,000 sheep and goats could be exposed to transboundary diseases if left untreated, according to Lebanon's ministry for agriculture," the report said.


The campaign aims to reduce the number of animals dying from preventable diseases in rural areas in particular, where natural resources are already strained by the spill-over effects from the humanitarian crisis in Syria.


Some of the animal diseases are highly contagious and can spread extremely rapidly, causing high mortality and morbidity in animals, with serious socio-economic consequences and possible public health repercussions, FAO said.


"The three most prevalent animal diseases detected in Lebanon include lumpy skin disease, foot-and-mouth disease and peste des petits ruminants, also known as 'goat plague', which is highly contagious," it said.


FAO and the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE) pledged earlier this month to eradicate sheep and goat plague—which causes fever, mouth sores, diarrhoea and often leads to a swift death—by 2030.


The stress being placed on Lebanon's "natural resources and food production systems is particularly worrying... with more people than ever before now in need of animal protein and milk," FAO said.


According to the UN, Lebanon now has the highest per capita ratio of refugees in the world, accounting for a quarter of the population—and their arrival has seen unemployment figures double.


The vaccination project—funded by Britain's Department for International Development (DFID)—follows an initial programme last year which was credited with stopping any widespread animal disease outbreaks.



© 2015 AFP


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date Jan 15, 2015

South Korea on Thursday announced a 36-hour lockdown over the weekend on poultry and livestock farms across the country to curb the spread of two highly contagious animal diseases—foot and mouth and bird ...



UN agency warns of new global bird flu threat


date Jan 29, 2013

The UN food agency on Tuesday warned the world risked a surge in bird flu outbreaks unless countries strengthen their monitoring against dangerous animal diseases despite economic hardship.



'Goat plague' threat to global food security and economy must be tackled, experts warn


date Jul 01, 2011

"Goat plague," or peste des petits ruminants (PPR), is threatening global food security and poverty alleviation in the developing world, say leading veterinarians and animal health experts in this week's Veterinary Record.



New foot-and-mouth disease strain spreads from N. Africa: UN


date May 02, 2012

A new strain of foot-and-mouth disease has been detected in the Gaza Strip, the UN food agency announced on Wednesday, saying this confirmed fears of a spread following outbreaks in Egypt and Libya.



S. Korea reports fresh foot-and-mouth case


date Dec 04, 2014

South Korea said Thursday it had confirmed a fresh case of foot-and-mouth disease in a pig farm, nearly four months after the last case was reported.





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date 12 hours ago

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