June 28, 2012

 

UN Food Agency urges concrete effort against FMD

 

 

Collective actions and strong commitments from all countries are necessary in order to create a workable strategy to combat foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) on a worldwide scale, the UN Food Agency says.

 

Foot-and-mouth disease, which affects all cloven-hoofed animals including sheep, goats, cattle, buffalo and pigs, causes serious production losses and can be fatal, particularly to younger animals.

 

"Recent FMD outbreaks around the globe demonstrate that animal diseases have no boundaries, can have a devastating impact and require a global response," Hiroyuki Konuma, Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) regional representative for Asia and the Pacific, said.

 

He was addressing the recent opening session of a foot-and-mouth disease conference in Bangkok.

 

While the disease does not directly affect humans, the FAO cited the negative impact it has on poor farmers whose livelihoods often depend on just a few animals, the loss of which can lead to hunger and economic ruin.

 

The agency estimates a US$5 billion global annual cost of the disease in terms of production losses and the need for prevention by vaccination.

 

It cited the effort against another cattle disease, rinderpest, as evidence of the effectiveness of cooperation.

 

"The successful eradication of rinderpest, a joint effort by scientists, governments, donors, veterinarians and farmers, clearly shows that we can reduce and even eliminate the threat of major diseases," the FAO's chief veterinary officer, Juan Lubroth, said in a statement.

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