Farmers report devastating losses as poor control measures are blamed for spread of infection across the country
Hundreds of thousands of pigs have been culled by Nigerian farmers in response to an explosion of African swine fever (ASF). The outbreak began around Lagos and parts of neighbouring Ogun state earlier this year, pig farmers say, but has now spread to many other parts of the country.
In the absence of official data, farmers who spoke to the Guardian estimated that nearly a million pigs had been put down so far. Mrs Bello, a farmer at Lagos-based Oke-Aro, the largest pig co-operative in west Africa, who preferred not to give her first name, said the co-operative alone had culled around 500,000 pigs. So far the virus has spread to more than a quarter of Nigeria’s 36 states. Continue reading...
http://dlvr.it/RYtQhX
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
The Untold Story of Polish Refugees in Uganda
A forgotten chapter of survival in exile during World War II By Anna Adima for NEWLINES MAGAZINE Anna Adima is a German-Ugandan writer an...

-
The making—and selling—of Coca-Cola. By E. J. Kahn, Jr. , THE NEW YORKER, Profiles February 6, 1959 Photograph by George Marks / Retrofile...
-
A legendary problem and the battle over who solved it. By Sylvia Nasar and David Gruber , THE NEW YORKER, Annals of m athematics Augus...
No comments:
Post a Comment