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North Korea steps up measures to prevent spread of African swine fever

Workers in protective suits disinfect a vehicle at a checkpoint on a road leading to a farm where African swine fever was detected, in the Xushui district of Baoding, Hebei Province, China, on February 26, 2019. (File photo by Reuters)

North Korea has stepped up measures to prevent the spread of the highly contagious and deadly African swine fever, its main state newspaper said on Wednesday, breaking its silence on the outbreak, which was first reported in late May.

In late May, North Korea reported an outbreak of African swine fever (ASF) to the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE), South Korea's Agriculture Ministry said, but the North has not made any official comment on its outbreak.

North Korea's Rodong Sinmun newspaper said on Wednesday nationwide preventive measures are being carried out to contain the virus, quoting North Korean leader Kim Jong-un as saying "prevention is the key to production in livestock industry."

"Increasing livestock production goes hand in hand with raising farm animals safe from various diseases," said Kim, according to the newspaper.

"Once highly contagious diseases like African swine fever are spread… herds of farm animals could die."

Preventative measures include disinfecting farms and restricting sales of pork and processed meat, the newspaper said.

This file photograph, taken on May 27, 2019, shows health officials spraying disinfectant on dead pigs inside an isolated quarantined pit in Hanoi, Vietnam, to stop the spread of African swine fever. (By AFP)

North Korea raises mainly chicken, ducks, and rabbits. Its pig population was 2.6 million as of 2017, according to data from Statistics Korea.

In the wake of the North's outbreak, South Korea has stepped up disinfection measures near the shared border to keep the viral disease spreading to the South.

So far, no further cases have been reported in North Korea.

African swine fever (ASF) is fatal and highly contagious to pigs and wild boards, but it does not affect humans. Since the first outbreak of ASF in East Asia was reported in China in early August last year, the virus has spread across China, and to Vietnam.

(Source: Reuters)


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