Malaysia Concerned About Disease in Australian Cattle
Malaysia has paused the import of all live cattle and buffalo from Australia citing concern about lumpy skin disease (LSD).
The move follows a decision last month by Indonesia to halt live cattle imports from four locations in Australia after 13 cattle were found to have the disease.
Australia’s Chief Veterinary Officer Mark Schipp has released a statement saying that Australia is urgently engaging with its Malaysian counterparts to advise that LSD is not present in Australia.
“I have made representations to my Malaysian counterpart, requesting the import restriction on live cattle and buffalo from Australia be lifted without delay. I have also confirmed to the World Organisation for Animal Health that Australia remains LSD free in accordance with international standards.”
He says that Australian livestock products continue to be traded, and the detection of LSD in cattle of Australian-origin post arrival in Indonesia does not affect the animal health status of Australia.
LSD is a highly infectious viral disease of cattle and buffalo that is transmitted by biting insects - it is not a disease that poses a risk to humans.
The Australian veterinary association Vets Against Live Export (VALE) says it raised the biosecurity risk of live export ships from Indonesia in July 2022. “Initially this was rejected, but later it was conceded by the West Australian Department of Agriculture (Australian Veterinary Association Albany Conference Sept 2022) that returning ships were a biosecurity risk for foot and mouth disease. It seems that ships could carry LSD vectors also,” says a blog on the VALE website. “The bottom line is that the risk to Australia’s non-exporting livestock producers and Australia’s much more profitable export beef trade matters less than the northern live export trade.”