Russia removes ban on poultry products from Arkansas

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Publish time: 11th October, 2013      Source: www.cnchemicals.com
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October 11, 2013

   

   

Russia removes ban on poultry products from Arkansas

   

   

   

A state official stated that Russia has lifted its ban on Arkansas poultry and poultry products.

   

   

After a strain of avian influenza was found at a Scott County farm in June, Russia, China, Japan, Turkey, Hong Kong and in the US, Mississippi and Georgia, banned Arkansas poultry and poultry products, said Preston Scroggin, director of the Arkansas Livestock and Poultry Commission.

   

   

However, Russia and Mississippi now are accepting Arkansas poultry and poultry products, Scroggin said Wednesday (Oct 9).

   

   

Brandon Doss, also of the state Livestock and Poultry Commission, said Georgia and the other countries besides China are expected to end their bans on October 24, or 90 days after the July 24 cleaning and disinfecting of the Scott County farm where bird flu was discovered in June. He said it is unclear when China might end its ban.

   

US Senator Mark Pryor, D-Ark., said in the summer that China is "being unfair" by banning poultry from all of Arkansas over an isolated incident.

   

   

He said in a prepared statement, "Our products are safe, healthy, and nutritious. I''ll be working with food safety and trade officials to resolve this issue as quickly as possible and reopen this market for our farmers. In the meantime, my family and I will continue to eat Arkansas poultry, and I know others in our state will do the same."

   

   

The state Livestock and Poultry Commission received confirmation of the positive test on June 18 and quarantined all poultry within a 6.2-mile radius of the Scott County chicken house facility where the infected bird was located, according to Mike Beebe''s office.

   

   

Scroggin said 18 chickens from that farm in Boles were found to have avian influenza, commonly known as bird flu. Those birds were killed, as were 9,000 other chickens that were destroyed in the area as a precaution. He said the bird flu incident was isolated to one farm.

   

   

Scroggin said the state completed its follow-up testing of chickens in Scott County in June and found no new evidence bird flu. He said the follow-up testing ended July 8-9 on about 10 commercial chicken houses and 52 "backyard flocks," with none turning up any evidence of bird flu.