SEOUL, Jan. 16 (Xinhua) -- South Korea reported on Saturday two more
outbreaks of foot-and-mouth disease in local cattle farms, more than a week
after the first outbreak in eight years, the government said.
The two cattle farms, both located in Pochen in Gyeonggi Province, about 45
kilometers north of Seoul, are within a 1-kilometer radius of the farm where the
first outbreak was confirmed on January 7, South Korea's Ministry of Food,
Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries said.
The government decided to cull and bury about 124 head of dairy cattle even
before detailed test results were received, and also plans to kill livestock
within a 500-meter radius of the two farms to prevent further spread of the
highly infectious virus.
The foot-and-mouth disease is a highly contagious and sometimes fatal
disease that can affect cloven-hoofed animals including pigs, sheep and goats,
while humans are hardly affected by the virus.
The recent spread of the disease comes eight years after the country
suffered the outbreaks in 2000 and 2002, respectively, which caused a fall in
dairy exports.
The South Korean government on Friday pledged to beef up quarantine
measures to prevent further spread of the disease.
Livestock suspected of infection would be immediately banned from moving
and could be culled before closer examination if deemed necessary, a government
official said.
The government will more strictly restrict access of animals and humans to
the contaminated area, especially within a three-kilometer radius of the farms
where the disease was reported.