DA urges ANC government to promptly aid with the chicken vaccine
22 November 2023
It has been almost six months since the outbreak of Avian Influenza, but the government has yet to finalise procurement of the necessary vaccines for farmers. The DA acknowledges the importance of ensuring food safety and preventing reckless vaccinations by farmers, but government’s delayed action to save farmers comes at a cost. Fortunately, the private sector is making progress with Deltamune's vaccine registration trials.
However, the estimated monitoring cost for vaccinated flocks is a major concern, estimated at R20 000 per house, per month. This high cost is due to the interpretation of a flock by the Department of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development (DALRRD), which defines a house as a flock. Farmers are also frustrated with the required individual samples, the limited pool of samples to five birds, and the fact that only vets are allowed to conduct post-mortem examinations and order/courier vaccines.
The proposed monitoring draft by the DALRRD is not feasible for producers from a human resource and financial standpoint. The DALRRD is currently understaffed with veterinary doctors, which only exacerbates the situation. In a recent written reply to the DA question, Minister Thoko Didiza, indicated that the department has a vacancy rate of 32% - which translates to 103 unfilled posts. Worse, poultry veterinary doctors are very scarce in this country.
The current deadlock between farmers and the DALRRD is centred on the monitoring of bird flocks. Farmers are required to prove that a flock is negative by providing 120 samples per house, and only then can the eggs go for pasteurisation. This creates delays in the registration of H5/H7 vaccines, and farmers will be blamed for these delays without considering that the monitoring and control is unaffordable. The least the government should have proposed was to subsidise the costs and provide additional manpower resources in the monitoring and control proposal.