You Are Visitor Number
,,  

   Your One Daily Source
    for Earth Change News

ECTV Home Breaking News ECTV MallNews ArchiveSearch
       Message BoardECTV AudioTV GuestsReceive Breaking News Newsletter
click here for more info on advertising
Translate this page automatically.
For Printer Friendly Version of This Article Click Here
 Make payments with PayPal - it's fast, free and secure!

Breaking News
Breaking News
Biology News
Science & Spirit
Earth Astrology
Prophecy
UFO News

Breaking News
Audio Archives
Guest Schedule
Newsletter
Pic of the Week
Live Events
News Archive  
 
 Live Cams
Headlines News
 Message Board

Breaking News
  Mitch Battros
  Webmaster

 Our TV Channels
 About ECTV
     Advertising
     Privacy Policy
     Site Map

12, 2000

Argentina Temporarily Halts U.S. Beef Exports Amid Foot-and-Mouth Concerns


BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) _ Fresh and frozen Argentine beef exports to the United States have been suspended temporarily over concerns of possible foot-and-mouth disease contamination, officials said Friday. The self-imposed suspension by Argentina, the world"s fourth-largest beef exporter, was taken as a preventive measure after cattle bred near the Paraguayan border were believed to be infected with the disease.

Argentine Agriculture Secretary Antonio Berhongaray said the decision to halt exports of fresh, chilled, and frozen beef would not affect Argentina"s status as a country free of the disease, a designation bestowed more than a year ago. Speaking with local news agency Diarios y Noticias, Berhongaray said "no country had modified its sanitary status" for Argentine beef and emphasized the move was only precautionary. He did not say when exports might resume. In Washington, officials in the U.S. Department of Agriculture said they did not expect Argentina"s would be a long-lasting measure. "We prefer to think of it as a temporary hold on imports until we can get the situation clarified," said Anna Cherry, a spokeswoman in the department"s animal and plant health inspection service.

The decision comes after Argentina ordered some 3,000 grass-fed cattle destroyed earlier this week. Some cattle bred in grasslands close to the northern border with Paraguay had tested positive for the virus that causes foot-and-mouth, a disease that usually causes cattle to stop eating and die. Under trade agreements, Argentina is allowed to export 20,000 tons of beef to the United States each year. Senasa President Oscar Bruni is expected to travel to Washington in the coming days to meet with agriculture officials there.

 

Click Here!


copyright -2000 Earth Changes TV P.O. Box 31286 Seattle, Wa 98103

Send e-mail to: earthchanges@earthlink.net or fax to: (206) 547-5136

Ths website is designed and maintained in cooperation with In The Moment Computing.
www.ITMComputing.com