Malaysia bans pork products from Indonesia following African swine fever outbreak

Malaysia bans pork products from Indonesia following African swine fever outbreak
Published 20 December 2019

 

PENANG, Malaysia (Sin Chew Daily/ANN) - Malaysian government has banned pork-related products from Indonesia following the African Swine Fever (ASF) outbreak. 

The government has banned pork-related products from Indonesia starting 13 December following the African Swine Fever (ASF) outbreak. Tourists are also banned from bringing in pork-related products into Malaysia, said Deputy Agriculture and Agro-based Industries Minister Sim Tze Tzin.

The Agriculture Ministry of Indonesia has confirmed ASF outbreak in Northern Sumatera, making Indonesia the 11th country affected by the outbreak in Asia. Other countries are: China, Mongolia, Vietnam, Cambodia, South Korea, North Korea, Laos, Myanmar, Philippines and Timor-Leste.

Sim said this when handing out school aid to 180 recipients under the “Back to School 2020” in Bayan Baru yesterday.

Enforcement officers are urged to be stringent at the airports in screening travellers’ luggage as the current period is considered peak season due to school holidays and festive season with high number of tourists. 

“The local pork industry is worth RM5billion (US$1.21 billion) and is 93% self-sustainable. The ban does not affect sales of pork in Malaysia as only 7% of pork are imported. The public should not be worried of increase in price of pork due to the ban,’’ said Sim. 

Since November last year, Malaysia started to ban import of pork-related products, including frozen pork products from 10 countries affected by ASF outbreak in stages. 

Sim said the Health Ministry would be carrying out raids at shopping malls, restaurants and food outlets to check on pork related products.

The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations said the Agriculture Ministry of Indonesia has confirmed the ASF outbreak in Indonesia. FAO is liaising with the Directorate General of Livestock and Animal Health Services. The Director of Animal Health requested FAO to provide recommendations on containment and control of African Swine Fever (ASF). The Agriculture Ministry of Indonesia has not released any information so far. 

More than 27,000 pigs have been culled while several thousands of pigs are at risk, said animal health officer. 

The authorities claimed that tens of thousands of pigs have been culled for the last few months in many provinces in Northern Sumatera. The number of pigs culled is believed to be increasing. 

The Medan Veterinary office head said on average 1,000 to 2,000 pigs die every day. The number is relatively small as compared to 1.2 million pigs in Northern Sumatera. However, pork is the main food for the Christians in the region despite majority of Indonesians are Muslims. 

More than 1,000 pigs were discarded at water channels last month. The authorities are digging out the dead pigs from the water channels to bury them. The police are tracing those involved in discarding the dead pigs into water channels.