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The European export ban covers all British livestock, meat, and milk |
2001: Ban follows foot-and-mouth outbreak
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Artificially 1969:
The The European Commission has banned all British milk, meat and livestock exports following the UK's first outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease for 20 years.
The ban - which will run until 1 March - follows yesterday's revelation of a foot-and-mouth outbreak at anabattoirnear Brentwood, Essex.
A routine inspection at Cheale Meats abattoir in Essex diagnosed the virus in 28 pigs.
Chief veterinary officer Jim Scudamore said all 300 animals at Cheale Meats would be slaughtered immediately.
The National Farmer's Union has said a second suspected case has been discovered in Gloucestershire.
Five-mile animal movement exclusion zones have been placed around the Essex abattoir and the site in Gloucestershire, which is thought to be somewhere between Woodchester and Nailsworth.
The British government is considering imposing its own ban on the export of all livestock, meat and milk from the UK.
This is the latest blow to Britain's already beleaguered farmers following last year's outbreak of swine fever, which led to the slaughter of 12,000 pigs and a temporary ban on the export of live pigs and pig semen.
Agriculture Secretary Nick Brown said: "If we can get on top of this and get back to a disease-free status quickly then hopefully the damage can be minimised.
"But if it goes on for some time the damage could be substantial."
Shadow agriculture minister Tim Yeo criticised the government for not doing enough to prevent the outbreak.
"British farmers cannot survive another round of dithering from MAFF like that which took place in the autumn over classical swine fever," he said.
"The government should have acted sooner to prevent the risk of this disease entering Britain through sub-standard meat imports."
Foot-and-mouth is a highly infectious viral disease that can affect cattle, pigs, sheep and goats. Symptoms include blisters in the mouth causing increased salivation and lameness.
Animals do not actually die from the disease but stop gaining weight and dairy cattle produce less milk.
The last major outbreak in Britain was in 1967, while the most recent outbreak in the European Union happened in Greece last year.
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