780 bulls sent back from Algeria were slaughtered in France

Published 2022년 9월 26일

Tridge summary

A shipment of 780 bulls from France to Algiers was blocked due to a dispute over the health status of three animals, with the Algerian authorities refusing to grant a landing permit. The issue arose due to an error on the export certificate, which incorrectly indicated that the animals were positive for infectious bovine rhinotracheitis. After unsuccessful negotiations, the animals were returned to France and slaughtered as a precautionary measure, as they had been fed hay from a country not free from foot-and-mouth disease. The slaughter was carried out at a cooperative in Rodez, Aveyron, and was completed over the weekend.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The herd left Sète on September 3 for the port of Algiers, where it never obtained a landing permit from the Algerian authorities and stayed for more than two weeks. According to the French authorities, a "difficulty in interpreting" the health status of three animals caused the blockage. The bulls had been vaccinated against infectious bovine rhinotracheitis (IBR). However, documents attached to their export certificate bore the mention “IBR positive”, falsely suggesting that they were carriers of the virus, according to the Ministry of Agriculture. After "fruitless discussions", France ultimately decided to bring the boat back and slaughter these 780 animals under the European protocol linked to foot-and-mouth disease. The slaughter was decided as a precaution because the animals had been fed at the port of Algiers with hay produced in Algeria, a country not free from foot-and-mouth disease, the ministry explained. The animals had returned Thursday, September 22 off Sète. Before ...
Source: Pleinchamp

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