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German authorities confirm case of African swine fever in wild boar

German authorities confirm case of African swine fever in wild boar

Agriland4 days ago

Authorities in Germany have confirmed a case of African swine fever (ASF) in a wild boar in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, in the northwest of the country.
The presence of the disease was confirmed by the National Reference Laboratory for ASF at the Friedrich Loeffler Institute (FLI), the leading animal disease research centre in Germany.
The dead boar was found in the district of Olpe, and further suspected cases are currently being clarified, the FLI said.
The exact ASF virus type is also in the process of being confirmed at the FLI in order to support the outbreak investigation in addition to the epidemiological task force.
The authorities in North-Rhine Westphalia immediately initiated protective and control measures, including the search for further dead wild boars.
In Germany, the federal states are responsible for combating animal diseases. The authorities responsible under state law carry out the measures to control animal diseases, while the FLI supports the epidemiological investigations.
The authorities cannot confirm at present if this case in a wild boar is linked with African swine fever outbreaks in several other German states. This can only be assessed by closer examination of the virus from the Olpe area.
The FLI said that outbreak investigations are important in order to asses the extent of the epidemic and to be able to take appropriate control measures.
Farmers in the area are being advised to review biosecurity measures. In the case of epidemics in Germany, cases have so far occurred in domestic pigs, especially is summer.
Therefore, increased vigilance is required, the FLI said.
In Ireland, the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine recently issued a reminder, via social media, for people never to feed food waste to pigs, as this can be a cause of ASF.
In a post on social media platform X, the department said: 'African swine fever can survive for months to years in pork and pork products like cured hams, salamis, frozen pork, etc. Food waste containing infected meat that is eaten by animals can cause a disease outbreak.
'Never feed food waste to pigs,' the department post added.

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German authorities confirm case of African swine fever in wild boar
German authorities confirm case of African swine fever in wild boar

Agriland

time4 days ago

  • Agriland

German authorities confirm case of African swine fever in wild boar

Authorities in Germany have confirmed a case of African swine fever (ASF) in a wild boar in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, in the northwest of the country. The presence of the disease was confirmed by the National Reference Laboratory for ASF at the Friedrich Loeffler Institute (FLI), the leading animal disease research centre in Germany. The dead boar was found in the district of Olpe, and further suspected cases are currently being clarified, the FLI said. The exact ASF virus type is also in the process of being confirmed at the FLI in order to support the outbreak investigation in addition to the epidemiological task force. The authorities in North-Rhine Westphalia immediately initiated protective and control measures, including the search for further dead wild boars. In Germany, the federal states are responsible for combating animal diseases. The authorities responsible under state law carry out the measures to control animal diseases, while the FLI supports the epidemiological investigations. The authorities cannot confirm at present if this case in a wild boar is linked with African swine fever outbreaks in several other German states. This can only be assessed by closer examination of the virus from the Olpe area. The FLI said that outbreak investigations are important in order to asses the extent of the epidemic and to be able to take appropriate control measures. Farmers in the area are being advised to review biosecurity measures. In the case of epidemics in Germany, cases have so far occurred in domestic pigs, especially is summer. Therefore, increased vigilance is required, the FLI said. In Ireland, the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine recently issued a reminder, via social media, for people never to feed food waste to pigs, as this can be a cause of ASF. In a post on social media platform X, the department said: 'African swine fever can survive for months to years in pork and pork products like cured hams, salamis, frozen pork, etc. Food waste containing infected meat that is eaten by animals can cause a disease outbreak. 'Never feed food waste to pigs,' the department post added.

Fr Brian D'Arcy: Sunday was my 80th birthday - In my head, I'm still 30
Fr Brian D'Arcy: Sunday was my 80th birthday - In my head, I'm still 30

Sunday World

time06-06-2025

  • Sunday World

Fr Brian D'Arcy: Sunday was my 80th birthday - In my head, I'm still 30

LONG LIFE | However, my body tells me I'll not play for Fermanagh in Croke Park today - or any other day – but I'll never throw in the towel. Psalm 90 puts it in perspective, 'All our days pass away; we finish our years with a moan. Our days may amount to three score and ten (that is, 70) or 80 for those who are strong.'. That's God warning me, I am now in the departure lounge. Reality began for me when the face in the mirror was not mine but my father's—the dreaded warning signs of old age are as plain as the wrinkles on my brow. With age comes wisdom, but sometimes age comes alone. I refuse to throw in the towel. There is no need to be old until you have to be. Fr Brian D'Arcy. Photo: Mark Condren News in 90 Seconds - 6th June 2025 The poet/priest Ed Hays rightly points out: 'We begin ageing at birth, so aren't there some preventive measures we can take to ensure a pleasurable old age?' Old people were respected in the past because they were few and far between. Now we live longer, and the number of old people is rapidly increasing. The much-maligned taxpayer is squeezed between an ever-increasing elderly population and an ever-more-expensive teenage population. For a long time, I thought I was one of those sandwiched between old age and youth. In the past year, I've stopped thinking of myself as middle-aged. I am old. Realising it and accepting it are not the same thing, though. Because I live in a Religious Community, I've become used to living with old people. They taught me that I should treat the old people I meet with the respect and the esteem I'd wish to be given when I am old. In old age, dignity is taken away by constant, intrusive examinations by doctors and medical procedures. 'Bodily strength and agility are removed, then teeth, eyesight, and hearing. Dreadful memory loss can occur at any time during the ageing process. It's as if we gradually lose everything and are stripped to the bone,' Ed Hays reminds me. Hays offers this advice as part of a spirituality of growing old. Accept the stripping away of many things we found necessary for our independence, as making room for inner peace. Pierre Teilhard de Chardin says the loss of bodily and mental abilities in old age is caused by the creator carving out large cavities in us to fill them up with God. Read more Hays adds that there are no pills to help us overcome the most dreaded diseases of old age – 'prickling impatience, touchy irritability, moody grumpiness, pessimistic cynicism, criticism of youth, and sickly nostalgia for the good old days. Never indulge in any of them.' Don't be worried about the inability to recite lengthy prayers. When pain and suffering become our constant companions, the ability to pray deserts us. Forget reciting prayers and instead become a living prayer by unconditionally embracing your sufferings. It's not easy being old these days. They say old people don't contribute to society and drain much-needed resources. In African culture, old age was treasured, and villagers respected the elderly as the most knowledgeable and the wisest. Since they discovered Google, who needs wise old people? One day, I asked a priest, who was over 90, how he kept himself so fit and active. Quick as a flash, he shot back: 'I always go to bed the same day I get up.' I haven't done that in fifty years. I cannot deny now that the sand in the hourglass speedily drains out, and the golden years pass quickly. My days are filled with goodbyes. The late Paddy Cole often joked: 'Brian, if we don't die soon, there'll be nobody left to come to our funerals.' I don't laugh as loudly now. As I age, I treasure the gifts of health, family, friends, and memories with sublime gratitude. To sum up, on my 80th birthday, I can genuinely say that growing old is no fun, but it is still better than the alternative. Age is inevitable; growing old is a choice. Opportunities don't happen; you have to create them. It's never too late to be what you might have become.

The Irish Independent's View: Great shame we do not have the legislation needed to underpin vital care of older people
The Irish Independent's View: Great shame we do not have the legislation needed to underpin vital care of older people

Irish Independent

time06-06-2025

  • Irish Independent

The Irish Independent's View: Great shame we do not have the legislation needed to underpin vital care of older people

One of the critical failings exposed then was the complete lack of focus in government agencies towards meeting the complex needs of older people. Then as now, they remain the key adult demographic for health and social care services. To hear two decades later that patients can still be badly mistreated, having their dignity and most basic needs ignored, is a terrible indictment of the State's commitment to the care of the very people who served it all their lives. Mr O'Donnell said there is a commitment for a national policy on safeguarding for adults in the Programme for Government and he wants this brought to the Cabinet before the summer recess. Most people will be astonished such a policy is not in place to protect people who may be vulnerable. Justice Minister Jim O'Callaghan has said the Government is committed to developing the policy. But what does it say about respect for our people that such critical protections have not already been built into the infrastructure of care? Unless agencies have the necessary legal powers to enforce compliance, the potential for abuse will continue 'Even if there is one person being abused, that is a serious incident that should be followed up immediately,' said Safeguarding Ireland chairperson Patricia Rickard-Clarke. She appealed to the Government to implement the recommendations of the Law Reform Commission's report from last year. This would put a critical legal framework in place, she said. Former INMO chief Liam Doran said he felt shame, sadness, frustration and anger over the revelations in the RTÉ report. 'Looking at people who have served this country, have worked for this country and have shown fortitude much more than the modern generation, and that's how we treat them. Shame, shame on all of us,' he said. We have waited too long for the vital legislation needed to underpin the care of older people. Unless agencies have the necessary legal powers to enforce compliance, the potential for abuse will continue. Seán Moynihan of charity Alone has expressed fears that Ireland is 'walking into the privatisation of nursing homes', where economics seems more important than the rights of the older person. For older people to be left frightened by institutional failings is indefensible. German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer wrote: 'The first 40 years of life give us the text – the next 30 supply the commentary on it.' And what a sad commentary it is on our society that once again we have been found wanting when it comes to taking care of our older citizens. There are no excuses and no exceptions, for as the poet Gertrude Stein put it: 'We are always the same age inside.'

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