Stringent bio-security measures needed to plug ASF in La Union: DA  

By Hilda Austria

August 14, 2024, 9:57 pm

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<div dir="auto"><strong>CHECKPOINT</strong>. A police personnel and a village official man the checkpoint at Barangay Pantar Norte in Balaoan town, La Union province in accordance with the ongoing ban on the entry and exit of pigs and pork products in the town due the African swine fever (ASF) in this undated photo. Authorities said 17 out of the municipality’s 36 villages have recorded positive ASF cases. <em>(Photo courtesy of Balaoan Police Station) </em></div>
 
CHECKPOINT. A police personnel and a village official man the checkpoint at Barangay Pantar Norte in Balaoan town, La Union province in accordance with the ongoing ban on the entry and exit of pigs and pork products in the town due the African swine fever (ASF) in this undated photo. Authorities said 17 out of the municipality’s 36 villages have recorded positive ASF cases. (Photo courtesy of Balaoan Police Station) 

MALASIQUI, Pangasinan – The Department of Agriculture (DA) is urging for strict compliance to bio-security measures after 17 of the 36 villages in the municipality of Balaoan in La Union province have confirmed cases of the African swine fever (ASF).

Dr. Alfiero Banaag, DA-Ilocos regulatory division chief and ASF focal person, in a phone interview, said the virus has affected the livelihood of 132 hog raisers and around 704 heads of swine have been culled since Aug. 14, 2024.

“The affected areas have been locked down, where entry and exit of swine or pork products have been totally banned. But there is still the need to strictly implement the bio-security measures,” he said.

He admitted that some of the hog raisers do not want to voluntarily surrender their swine for culling claiming that these are healthy.

“I hope they would understand that despite them claiming that their pens are clean and their pigs are healthy, the virus has already spread, so we can never really be certain,” he said in Filipino.  

He said strict monitoring in areas with backyard piggeries should be implemented to ensure no infected swine will be moved to other areas.

An ASF Task Force has been formed, and together with villages officials, authorities have set up temporary animal quarantine checkpoints at every entry and exit points, in accordance with the Executive Order No. 2024-08-067 issued on Aug. 1.

The first ASF-confirmed positive case in the town was recorded in Barangay Sablut on July 19 this year.

Banaag said the affected backyard hog raisers from Balaoan will be compensated with PHP5,000 per head of culled swine, with maximum of 20 heads per raiser.

Meanwhile,  Banaag said the ASF-positive cases in two villages in San Fernando City, with two affected hog raisers and 41 culled swine, as well as the cases in five villages of Luna town, with 16 affected hog raisers and 164 culled pigs, are now under control.

The hog raisers will also be compensated depending on the number of heads they voluntarily surrendered for culling.

Banaag also appealed to the residents to buy pork products only from legitimate and reliable sources such as the public market or groceries to be sure that these are not ASF-infected.

Meanwhile, Banaag said there are no reported positive cases in the other provinces in Ilocos Region. (PNA)

 

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