| | | Business News | May 2009
Mexican Pig Producer Reports Zero Pork Sales Due to A/H1N1 Flu Xinhua go to original
Mexico City - Not one single pig has been sold in Mexico's southeastern state of Guerrero for the last three weeks because of the A/H1N1 flu, the industry association in the state said on Sunday.
Before the Mexican government declared a flu emergency on April 23, the state's farmers on average sold 1,120 pigs a day, Armando Cabrera Villela, president of the Guerrero Pig Producers' Council, was quoted as saying.
Now the sales were zero, he said.
Villela said the state risked losing 600 jobs in 105 farms. He called on the government to support farmers financially because the crisis of confidence in pork would only be overcome gradually.
The World Health Organization (WHO) says there is no risk of contracting influenza A/H1N1, which has killed 68 people in Mexico, by eating pork and that the new strain of the virus contains elements of bird, human and pig viruses.
The flu was first named as swine flu until the WHO asked for a name change at the end of April.
The WHO said that there are now 8,451 cases of the disease worldwide, but only six deaths outside of Mexico, with four in the United States and one each in Canada and Costa Rica. The United States now has 4,714 cases of the flu, the largest number across the globe. |
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