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News
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Reged: 25/12/02
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Foot and mouth disease in Zim
      #1703 - 19/02/03 01:05 AM

Roaming Buffalo Spread Foot-And-Mouth Disease

Daily News
February 8, 2003

Energy Bara in Masvingo


THERE are fears that the foot-and-mouth disease in Zaka, Bikita and Chiredzi districts could spread to other parts of the country as fences surrounding the country's national parks have not been repaired.

Buffalo, the main carriers of the disease, continue to move randomly throughout Masvingo because they can get out of parks since fences were damaged during the height of farm invasions in 2000.

A fresh outbreak of the disease has been reported in parts of Gutu and the Department of Veterinary Services does not have adequate vaccines to treat affected animals.

Bikita, Buhera and Zaka had foot-and-mouth outbreaks last month as buffalo and cattle continued to mix.

In the Masvingo East commercial farming area, a herd of buffalo is wreaking havoc with the Department of National Parks allegedly saying that it had no fuel to round up the stray animals.

The marauding buffalo are believed to have come from Kyle Recreational Park which is close to Masvingo East commercial farming area.

Black commercial farmers in the area have blamed the government's fast-track resettlement programme for the disease outbreak.

Said one farmer: "Buffalo are mixing with our cattle. We do not know what to do because the Department of National Parks has told us that it does not have fuel to collect the animals."

Ernest Dzimwasha, the Masvingo provincial veterinary officer, confirmed that buffalo are roaming the province.

Said Dzimwasha: "We have received reports of stray buffalo, but in most cases we have failed to locate them."

Fences around Gonarezhou National Park and Save Valley Conservancies have not been repaired giving room to buffalos and other wild animals to move out of the sanctuaries. The foot-and-mouth disease first broke out in Chiredzi in 2001 and spread to Bikita and Zaka as the Department of Veterinary Services battled to contain it.

Zimbabwe's beef exports to the European Union and South Africa were suspended in August 2001 after the outbreak.

Exports will only resume when there is no outbreak for at least six months.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200302100565.html

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NitroXAdministrator
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Reged: 25/12/02
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Loc: Barossa Valley, South Australi...
Re: Foot and mouth disease in Zim [Re: News]
      #1704 - 19/02/03 01:14 AM

When I was in Zim last year I commented on the gates standing by themselves on the side of the roads. Also those ladder thingies which span a fence which enable people to easily get over a fence without needing a gate.

The funny thing was there was no fence for either. The PH mentioned there USED to be a fence but the wire had all been stolen for snares or for other uses by the thieves.


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Govt get out of our lives NOW!
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TimV
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Reged: 16/01/03
Posts: 5
Loc: South Africa
Re: Foot and mouth disease in Zim [Re: NitroX]
      #1709 - 20/02/03 05:08 AM

I think in 10 years time we will hunt Zim as " wide open areas, unfenced, uninhabitat, free roaming animals ..." or maybe not...

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NitroXAdministrator
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Reged: 25/12/02
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Re: Foot and mouth disease in Zim [Re: TimV]
      #1710 - 20/02/03 11:40 AM

Tim

On the other hand in the middle of the Matetsi Safari area there was thousands of lovely steel or alloy poles 8 or 9 feet high running for many many kilometres. In some cases there was still high tensile wire attached. This fence was left over from 20 years ago as TB fencing when the safari area carried commercial cattle to keep buffalo from the South (Hwange) from moving into cattle areas. The poles are still all there.

I thought "What I could do with all that 'free' fencing ! "

But I suppose as there fencing is still there, the game scouts of the safari area are still doing a pretty good job. Certainly the game in unit 1 and another block showed evidence of the good work continuing.


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John aka NitroX

...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"


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mikeh416Rigby
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Reged: 24/02/03
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Re: Foot and mouth disease in Zim [Re: News]
      #1749 - 24/02/03 01:13 PM

This is one of the many reasons why the game farms in Namibia and RSA are fenced.

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