ASF-affected hog raisers in Benguet get aid from gov't
>> Wednesday, February 26, 2020
By Liza
Agoot
BAGUIO CITY – The
Department of Agriculture (DA) and the provincial government of Benguet have
started to release the livelihood assistance to the families affected by the
de-population and culling operations as a result of the African swine fever
(ASF) infestation that has reached Benguet Province.
DA in the
Cordillera Administrative Region (DA-CAR) executive director Cameron Odsey said
Wednesday they have already released starter chicks for poultry production to
the affected raisers.
Each hog
grower received 200 chicks and a sack of feeds to start with while they are
still reeling from the effects of the ASF infestation.
He said it is
just one of the national government’s assistance because there will still be an
indemnification fund that qualified raisers will receive from the DA.
Odsey said
dialogues were held with the hog raisers following the depopulation and culling
as poultry raising was identified as a stop-gap livelihood.
Upon testing
positive for ASF, “de-population” of animals that go with the infected hogs are
immediately killed to avoid the spread of the disease.
With the
"1-7-10 protocol" in place, areas within a one-kilometer radius from
where the infected hogs were discovered are culled, regardless of their
condition.
The pigs
found within the seven-kilometers radius are prohibited from being brought
outside the area and they are subjected to regular blood testing. Meanwhile,
those within a 10-kilometer radius are prohibited from being sold outside the
area.
After
culling, the area is cleaned daily for a month. Another month is devoted to
sanitation, then a three-month rest period.
After the
fifth month, a sentinel pig, aged 45 days, is placed in which blood is
regularly tested for the presence of the ASF. If it survives without a showing
of symptoms of ASF, the owner can resume swine raising activity.
Dr. Miriam
Tiongan, Benguet provincial veterinary office chief, said the 37 affected hog
raisers in the towns of Tuba, Itogon and La Trinidad got a total of 7,000
chicks and 12 heads of sheep as government aid.
She said the
provincial government also released one sack of rice each to the affected
raisers.
Tiongan said
a total of 532 pigs were either killed or had died after being infected from
the three pigs that tested positive for ASF.
Tiongan
reiterated her call for residents to observe good animal-food raising practices
and to buy only from places that are declared ASF-free. (PNA)
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