Hungary Deploys Military to Contain Foot-and-Mouth Outbreak

Hungary reported its first case in more than 50 years of the disease on a cattle farm early last month.

Hungary flag
Hungary
(Canva.com)

Hungary has deployed soldiers and launched new disinfection measures to help contain an outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) in a northwestern area bordering Slovakia and Austria, the agriculture minister said on Wednesday.

Hungary reported its first case in more than 50 years of the disease, which often leads to trade restrictions, on a cattle farm early last month.

Since then, neighboring Slovakia has detected outbreaks at five locations after reporting its first cases in March. It has also stepped up measures to contain the disease’s spread.

Hungarian Agriculture Minister Istvan Nagy said foot-and-mouth disease was found at two additional farms in Gyor-Moson-Sopron county by Wednesday morning, affecting 3,500 cattle in total.

“We are making every effort to prevent any additional outbreaks,” Nagy said in a Facebook video.

The defense ministry did not immediately respond to emailed questions regarding the number of soldiers deployed to assist the containment effort.

Hungary’s cattle stock numbered 861,000 heads based on a livestock census in December, little changed from levels a year earlier. That constituted 1.2% of the European Union’s total cattle stocks, official statistics showed.

Data on the website of Hungary’s National Food Chain Safety Office showed FMD affecting a total of four farms in Hungary, all of them located in the country’s northwest, while checks at more than 600 other farms returned negative results.

Nagy said Hungarian authorities have launched additional measures, including disinfection points at border crossings and highway exits in the northwest to prevent the disease from spreading beyond the affected county.

FMD poses no danger to humans but causes fever and mouth blisters in cloven-hoofed ruminants such as cattle, swine, sheep and goats.

(Reporting by Gergely Szakacs and Jason Hovet;Editing by Joe Bavier)

Your Next Read: What Do Foot-and-Mouth Disease Outbreaks in Europe Mean for the U.S.?

Drovers_Logo_No-Tagline (1632x461)
Drovers_Logo_No-Tagline (1632x461)
Read Next
As the cost of high-quality bulls climbs, reproductive physiologist Jaclyn Ketchum explains how artificial insemination offers elite genetics and superior herd uniformity for a fraction of the investment.
Get News Daily
Get Market Alert
Get News & Markets App