Sweden slaughters 3,200 turkeys after discovering bird flu on the farm

Published Nov 18, 2020

Tridge summary

Sweden has slaughtered 3,200 turkeys due to bird flu, effectively halting its poultry exports to non-EU markets for at least 12 weeks. The outbreak, located in the Skane region, had previously killed 1,400 turkeys on the infected farm. This development is part of a broader bird flu epidemic in Europe, with additional cases reported in Germany, France, the Netherlands, Denmark, and Great Britain. Authorities in these countries are actively monitoring the situation and looking for ways to prevent further spread.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Sweden slaughtered 3,200 turkeys after discovering bird flu, officials said on Wednesday, effectively stopping the country's poultry exports to markets outside the European Union for at least three months. The massacre follows a series of outbreaks of bird flu in Europe in recent weeks, with suspicions of wild birds spreading the disease. "So far, we only have one infected farm in Sweden, but we don't know how much of the virus we have in wildlife ... so, of course, there is a risk that another farm will be infected," Katharina Gielen, a chief department of the Agriculture Council from Sweden, he told Reuters. googletag.cmd.push (function () {googletag.display ('dfp-noticiasagricolas-post-banner2');}); The disease, found in the Skane region of southern Sweden, had already killed some 1,400 turkeys on the farm before slaughter began on Tuesday, she said. Germany said it is considering slaughtering up to 70,000 ...

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