Traders ‘shortchange’ hog raisers amid ASF threat in Antique

By Annabel Consuelo Petinglay

June 14, 2023, 3:57 pm

<p><strong>SUSPECTED ASF</strong>. Hogs are being sold at the Sibalom Livestock in this undated photo. Antique Provincial Veterinary Office Public Health Division chief Dr. Marco Rafael Ardamil in an interview on Wednesday (June 14, 2023) warned hog raisers against unscrupulous traders or middlemen buying live weight swine for a very cheap price because of the alleged African swine fever cases in Hamtic town. (<em>PNA photo courtesy of Sibalom Livestock and Poultry - Raisers Association</em>)</p>

SUSPECTED ASF. Hogs are being sold at the Sibalom Livestock in this undated photo. Antique Provincial Veterinary Office Public Health Division chief Dr. Marco Rafael Ardamil in an interview on Wednesday (June 14, 2023) warned hog raisers against unscrupulous traders or middlemen buying live weight swine for a very cheap price because of the alleged African swine fever cases in Hamtic town. (PNA photo courtesy of Sibalom Livestock and Poultry - Raisers Association)

SAN JOSE DE BUENAVISTA, Antique – The Antique Provincial Veterinary (ProVet) has warned hog raisers against unscrupulous traders offering to buy their hogs at a lower price due to the suspected case of African swine fever (ASF) that was reported in the municipality of Hamtic.

ProVet Public Health Division chief Dr. Marco Rafael Ardamil said in an interview Wednesday that they received reports of traders or middlemen offering to buy live weight for only PHP70 per kilo or half the price of the PHP130-PHP140 current buying price.

“We received reports like in the town of Patnongon and other northern towns of the province that there are some people who are taking advantage and even threatening hog-raisers to already sell their live weight for as low as PHP70 per kilo,” Ardamil said.

He added that they allegedly told hog raisers that they need to dispose of their hogs because soon the suspected cases in Hamtic will spread to their areas.

Ardamil, however, said that hog mortality is reported only in the town of Hamtic with 348 affected heads from 11 barangays.

“We still cannot confirm that the hog mortality is due to the ASF since we have not yet sent a specimen for testing at the Department of Agriculture-Bureau of Animal Industry (DA-BAI) laboratory,” Ardamil said.

Ardamil added that transfer or transport of swine, slaughtering and sale of pork remain in effect in Hamtic until June 19 as mandated under Executive Order 32 issued by Hamtic Mayor Julius Ronald Pacificador on June 2.

The quarantine aimed to provide ProVet and the Hamtic Municipal Agriculture Office (MAO) ample time to investigate, diagnose, and provide other necessary interventions or treatment to ailing animals.

ProVet chief Dr. Florencio Macuja in a press conference on June 5 said that the hogs might be suffering from congested lungs or pneumonia and not ASF because of the rains that were experienced in the province weeks before swine deaths were reported.

“There’s a possibility also that the first hog mortality might be due to other reasons aside from ASF since we still have no laboratory confirmation,” Macuja then said. (PNA)

 

 

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