Hungary reports African swine fever in domestic pigs for first time


Pigs are seen on a pig farm in Rabacsecseny, Hungary, May 31, 2018. REUTERS/Bernadett Szabo

BUDAPEST, June 4 (Reuters) - ⁠Hungarian authorities ordered the culling of 3,000 pigs ⁠on a farm after African swine fever was ‌reported in domestic pigs for the first time in the country, the National Food Chain Safety Office said in a statement ​on Thursday.

The virus, which is harmless ⁠to humans but highly ⁠contagious and deadly in pigs, was reported on a ⁠farm in ‌the village of Vallaj, in the eastern county of Szabolcs-Szatmar-Bereg.

"The culling of the herd ⁠of approximately 3,000 pigs is underway, and ​an epidemiological investigation ‌to determine the origin of the infection and ⁠its possible ​further spread is also taking place," the food safety authority said.

It added that authorities have designated a protection ⁠and surveillance zone around the location.

African ​swine fever has spread from Africa to Europe and Asia, and has killed hundreds of millions of pigs, leading ⁠to trade restrictions and affecting global meat markets.

Cases have been detected and prompted the culling of pigs in recent years across Europe in Croatia, Spain, Germany, ​Italy and Estonia.

The food safety authority ⁠said that the outbreak could cause significant economic damage.

Hungary ​had about 2.9 million domestic ‌pigs at the end of 2025, ​according to the website of the Central Statistics Office.

(Reporting by Anita Komuves;Editing by Elaine Hardcastle)

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