Zimbabwe and Namibia Ban SA Poultry

ZIMBABWE & NAMIBIA - Namibia and Zimbabwe have banned poultry imports from South Africa after an outbreak of bird flu.
calendar icon 28 June 2017
clock icon 3 minute read

Zimbabwe has indefinitely banned poultry products from SA following an outbreak of the H5N8 Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza in the Free State and Mpumalanga provinces of SA, reported Zimbabwe's The Herald, quoting the director of Zimbabwe's Department of Veterinary Services, Dr Joshpat Nyika.

Banned products include hatching eggs, table eggs, frozen chicken and mechanically de-boned meat, according to Dr Nyika.

Zimbabwean officials will wait for their SA counterparts to let them know when the problem has been solved.

Namibia's Directorate of Veterinary Services told Fin24 on Tuesday that it has suspended SA poultry imports.

It said it has suspended the import and in transit movement of live poultry, birds and poultry products from South Africa and Belgium. This includes ostriches and ostrich products. The suspension is in line with Namibia's Animal Health Act, it said.

Cooked poultry meat products from SA for commercial purposes may, however, still be imported to Namibia under a revised veterinary import permit.

Earlier Fin24 reported that it is the first outbreak ever of H5N8 among South African chickens.

On Monday night, South Africa's Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (DAFF) confirmed a second case of avian flu in Standerton, after the first outbreak in a broiler breeder site near Villiers last Thursday.

The department has also increased its passive surveillance and urged commercial and backyard farmers to report any cases of large numbers of bird deaths to the nearest state vet. This will allow the department to send veterinary officials for a follow-up investigation, and to collect samples.

The two affected farms are not directly linked, meaning this is a separate introduction. At the moment, wild ducks migrating from Europe are suspected to have spread the flu.

According to Dr Charlotte Nkuna, senior executive at the South African Poultry Association, it poses a serious threat to SA's poultry industry.

Further Reading

You can visit the Avian Flu page by clicking here.

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