Outbreak turns consumers away from pork
Tue, 15 September 2015 ppp
Cheng Sokhorng
Pork
sales at local markets have taken a hit following the recent outbreak
of blue-ear pig disease as fears have spread among consumers that the
meat is not fit for human consumption, pork vendors said yesterday.
First
identified in Siem Reap in mid-August, Porcine Reproductive and
Respiratory Syndrome, known as blue-ear pig disease, has infected more
than 4,000 pigs, with over 1,200 needing to be culled.
The
government said yesterday, however, that despite spreading to three
more provinces, the outbreak is now under control. Less than 200 pigs
are now carrying the infection, thanks to treatment from veterinarians
sent to the affected farms, said Tan Phannara, chief of the Animal
Health Office at the Agriculture Ministry.
“We are now controlling it, it did not impact the market demand because this kind of disease can be cured,” he said.
Seeking to allay consumer’s fears, Phannara added that the disease is not transferable to humans.
While
the outbreak was not large enough to cause a supply shortage, Chan
Sothea, the owner of Hok Hieng Co Ltd, a pork distributor to several of
the larger markets in Phnom Penh, said that shoppers have stayed away
from pork since the blue-ear pig disease was first reported.
“The amount of pork meat demanded at the market is lower than normal, and so is the price,” he said.
Some
farmers were offloading pigs at a cheaper rate fearing that the disease
would spread, Sothea said. While others whose swine had already been
infected were selling their pigs to the market for even less, he added.
Keo
Sokleap, a pork vendor at O’Russey Market, said her sales had dropped
by 70 per cent since the outbreak and she had called in a veterinarian
to check her meat each day to reassure customers at the market.
“Most buyers are nervous of the blue-ear disease so they have reduced eating pork meat to protect their health” she said.
Vendors at the Old Market in Siem Reap also reported a downturn in sales yesterday.
“Most
buyers feel scared of the health impact because they do not understand
much about the disease,” said Seng Kimhout, a pork vendor at the Old
Market.
Kimhout said that he had lowered his prices hoping to increase sales, but it was having no impact.
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