Agriculture ministry officials blame deaths on animal feed, not disease
Authorities have been on the lookout for signs of the deadly H5N1
strain of bird flu
Camels are traded for thousands of dollars each in Saudi Arabia
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (Reuters) -- Hundreds of camels have died in Saudi
Arabia this week from a mystery ailment.
Cars stop on a Riyadh highway to make way for a caravan of camels. The
animals are big business in Saudi Arabia.
The Agriculture Ministry has said 232 camels died in the space of four
days in the Dawasir Valley, 250 miles south of Riyadh.
King Abdullah has promised compensation for owners, who say the real
number of deaths is far higher.
Agriculture ministry officials have denied an infectious disease caused
the deaths and blamed them on animal feed supplied by food storage
authorities.
"The disease has to be limited to one place to prevent it spreading and
then they have to find a serum," said camel breeder Hamad al-Harthy,
who talked of hundreds of deaths.
"They need to bring in help from abroad to find a solution," said
trader Turki Abdelaziz.
Camels are big business in the desert kingdom and are traded by Bedouin
tribes for thousands of dollars each. The animals are used for racing
and their meat is also prized.
Authorities have been on the lookout for signs of the deadly H5N1
strain of bird flu over the last year. The virus was found in birds in
two instances, in March and last year.
Saudi Arabia's Agriculture Ministry has lifted bans on poultry imports
Original
Source
|
|
||||
|
Shabbat Times
About Us
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
||||
|
|
||||

![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)