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    Italy's pork industry blames wild boars for swine fever

    Italy's exports of pork and pork products amount to 1.5 billion euros ($1.7 billion) annually, with about one-third of that coming from sales outside the European Union.

    Italys pork industry blames wild boars for swine fever
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    The discovery of African swine fever in northern Italy has Italian pork producers fearing significant damages to a major agricultural export. Earlier this month, a case of the virus, which can be deadly to pigs but doesn't harm humans, was detected in a wild boar in the Piedmont region in northwest Italy. Wild boars, whose meat is used in pasta sauces, are a popular prey for hunters in Italy. The nation's health and agricultural ministers have banned hunting in parts of Liguria and Piedmont temporarily to try to prevent the spread of the virus in more animals. The Italian farm lobby Confagricoltura says that China, Japan, Taiwan and Kuwait have already suspended imports of Italian pork and that neighbouring Switzerland has also imposed some restrictions.

    Italy's exports of pork and pork products amount to 1.5 billion euros ($1.7 billion) annually, with about one-third of that coming from sales outside the European Union.

    Other regions in Italy's north are pressing for a crackdown on wild boars outside the stricken area in a bid to save their own pork production. ''The African swine fever can hit pigs and boars, it's highly contagious, often lethal,'' Gianluca Barbacovi, the head of farm lobby Coldiretti in Italy's Trentino Alto Adige region, said Saturday.

    The European Food Safety authority says that healthy pigs and boar usually become infected by, among other means, contact with infected animals, including free-ranging pigs and wild boar.

    A proliferation of wild boars has also plagued urban areas, including some neighbourhoods in the capital of Rome in recent years. The boars break through fences ringing parks on the outskirts of the city and invade streets to root through uncollected garbage for food. Lobbyists for Italy's prestigious Prosciutto di Parma (Parma Ham) production have hastened to calm any fears by consumers, saying that the aging process its meat undergoes renders the African swine fever virus harmless.

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