Trustworth Quality Bales 👚👖👗👕

Trustworth Quality Bales 👚👖👗👕

Basa redu tinohodhesa mabhero, mabhero emhando yepamusoro nemutengo wakanaka. We have a good reputation and customer yatatanga kudealer nayo todealer in the long run because of customer loyalty. +263783405393

Open
HomeAgriculture

Vet Department Destroys 10 Cattle In Chinhoyi

2 years agoMon, 06 Feb 2023 06:35:06 GMT
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LinkedIn
Vet Department Destroys 10 Cattle In Chinhoyi

Ten (10) cattle that were illegally moved from a farm in Banket to Chinhoyi were destroyed over the weekend by the Department of Veterinary Services (DVS).

DVS destroyed the livestock as part of efforts to fight the spread of January disease, also known as Theileriosis.

The cattle only had police clearance but had no veterinary movement permit.

Under the Animal Health Act, farmers and livestock dealers need veterinary clearance to move livestock.

Department of Veterinary Services director Dr Jairus Machakwa on Sunday told The Herald that the illegal movement of cattle is undermining their efforts to combat January disease. He said:

Click here: Pindula WhatsApp Channel
wa.me/channel/0029Vb4GVea90x2nCSDImS1b

 

For any livestock to be moved, we need a veterinary movement permit which proves that the animals have been cleared by the department and that it is safe to move them to another area.

As you might know, we have declared war against January disease, but this is being deterred by those illegal movements of livestock.

Farmers should know that each cow should get a veterinary movement permit for it to be moved.

That helps us to ensure that we do not spread disease from one place to the next.

It also helps us when we are having outbreaks to quickly control the outbreak and lift any quarantines that we would have imposed for disease control.

The law will be applied in all cases where animals are moved illegally.

This loss of animals is avoidable and farmers need to comply with the Law to avoid the destruction of their animals.

Theileriosis is common during the rainy season, that is, between December and March and is most prevalent in January hence the name January disease.

The disease is spread through the bite of an infected brown ear tick.

Tags

5 Comments

Qlayz · 2 years ago
ko police yai clear mombe vachiziva kut hadzisi kutenderwa kufamba haaa nxaaa
Anonymous · 2 years ago
Why not quarantine the cattle and test them for January disease or other transmissible diseases? Truthfully speaking cattle are just moved from one place to the other without any papers and the Vet dept does not have the necessary manpower and mechanisms in place to stop the movements.
??? · 2 years ago
Sometimes Police mislead farmers, they take bribe and tell the farmers that their clearence is enough to move cattle
ass com · 2 years ago
shortcuts are always dangerous look now what a big lose
Taliban · 2 years ago
dai dzaive mombe dzembinga makatoluma USA makanyarara, manje ndedza farai nafarisai

Leave a Comment


Generate a Whatsapp Message

Buy Phones on Credit.

More Deals
Feedback