ThePoultrySite Latest News
Vietnam Seizes Thousands Of Chickens Smuggled From China
HANOI - Authorities in northern Vietnam confiscated 2,500 chickens smuggled in from neighboring China, highlighting the challenges of stopping bird flu, officials said Tuesday."We are fighting an uphill battle against smugglers who use two-way radios to deal with us,"
Nguyen Thang Loi, director of Lang Son provincial market control department.
Authorities confiscated 1.3 tons of chickens found in a truck early Tuesday morning, said Nguyen Thang Loi, director of Lang Son provincial market control department. The chickens will be destroyed, he added.
In neighboring Quang Ninh province, authorities on Sunday confiscated 4.3 tons of chickens smuggled in from China in two separate cases, said provincial chief market inspector Nguyen Dang Truong.
Loi said his staff have confiscated some 50 tons of chickens smuggled in from China so far this year, while authorities in Quang Ninh have confiscated and destroyed more than 60 tons of the birds in the same period.
"We are fighting an uphill battle against smugglers who use two-way radios to deal with us," Loi said.
The H5N1 bird flu virus has hit Vietnam hard this year, ravaging poultry stocks across the country. It has killed 46 people in Vietnam since the virus began spreading in late 2003. Animal experts have blamed unvaccinated birds smuggled across borders for fanning the disease, but local officials have struggled to stop the illegal transport across Vietnam's long porous border with China.
Source: ChinaPost
Latest Poultry Industry News
XIII WPC Report: Huvepharma Adds to Veterinary Pharmaceuticals Range
BIRD FLU: Kyoto Prof Creates Bird Flu Antibodies from Ostrich Egg
Alliance: Cobb-Vantress and Hendrix Genetics
US Prohibits the Extralabel Use of Cephalosporin
Big is Beautiful: Clarence Court Goes Very Large
NFUS: Defra Debate on Cost Share is a Waste of Time
Burundi: Untreatable Disease Kills 1000 Chicken
Poultry CRC: the Leading Global Research Body
Californian Chicken Could Come Home to Roost
IFA: Dangers of Mandelson's WTO Deal Accepted









