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WSWS : News
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Trade barriers go up as foot and mouth disease spreads to
France
By Mike Ingram
15 March 2001
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France confirmed an outbreak of foot and mouth disease Tuesday
March 13, after widespread speculation that the disease had crossed
the Channel from England.
British imports were blamed for the outbreak, after six cows
were destroyed on a farm in the Mayenne region of northwest France.
The six animals were the first to show signs of the blistering
and lesions associated with the disease. All other livestock on
the farm was slaughtered in an attempt to prevent the spread of
the disease, with many fearing it will become a pan-European epidemic.
Outside Europe, cases have also been reported in Argentina
and the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The first case in Argentina
threatens the country's $500m beef export sector. In the UAE,
eight cases of foot and mouth have been discovered. The UAE responded
by banning the import of animals and birds without prior permission.
The first confirmed case in France was at a farm next to a
holding unit that had received British sheep. These were destroyed
three weeks ago, but it appears to have been too late to prevent
the disease from spreading. Three other cases were reported in
France, all of which were linked to the Mayenne outbreak. A suspected
case in Italy was reported among sheep imported from France, some
of which might have come originally from Britain.
The crisis has serious economic consequences for European agriculture.
Some three hundred million animals are at risk and a number of
countries have already imposed import bans on meat from the European
Union (EU). The United States and Canada immediately announced
a ban on all European meat imports upon confirmation of the first
case in France. They were quickly followed by Australia, New Zealand
and South Korea, while Japan imposed a ban on meat from the UK
and France.
As with the issue of BSE/Mad Cow Disease, legitimate concerns
over the possible spread of the disease are fuelling an already
intense trade conflict internationally. At least partly responsible
for the speed with which the US responded is the fact that Europe
had previously imposed its own ban on the importing of hormone-treated
US beef. According to the New York Times, the American
ban "prompted some European officials to complain that the
Bush administration was overreacting." In defending the action
the New York Times says, "But three members of the
European UnionBelgium, Portugal and Spainare closing
their borders to French meat, as is Switzerland. Norway banned
imports of French farm products, and Germany and Italy took protective
measures... Argentina said it would voluntarily restrict beef
exports."
Britain remains the country worst affected by the current outbreak.
With the number of identified cases in Britain having risen to
205 Wednesday, all efforts at containment have clearly failed.
The situation is now officially recognised as being worse than
that of 1967the last serious foot and mouth epidemic effecting
British livestock. Although the number of farms where the disease
has been confirmed is still lower than at the same stage of the
1967 crisis, the emergence of large-scale farming means much greater
numbers of animals are effected.
Farms are today six times larger than the average holding in
1967 and keep more than 1,000 animals compared to an average of
just 100 in 1967. The average number of animals to be slaughtered
in each confirmed outbreak has risen from fewer than 200 in 1967
to more than 600 today.
The present size of flocks and herds is also a factor in how
far the disease has spread. In 1967, it was much easier to spot
a few sick sheep among a smaller flock, but among 1,000 or more
animals this is much more difficult. Even as the slaughter proceeds,
new outbreaks are already being prepared, as infected animals
remain undetected.
Coming as it does in the aftermath of the BSE crisis, the impact
upon British agriculture has been devastating, and could bankrupt
many of the country's few remaining small farmers. Farming accounts
for just two percent of the workforce in Britain, with only 20
percent of farms being family owned.
The economic impact of the present outbreak is already being
felt beyond the agricultural sector, however. The Federation of
Small Businesses (FSB) has written to the British Bankers' Association,
the Inland Revenue and Customs and Excise (responsible for tax
collection) and the Local Government Association urging them to
show restraint in their demands for repayments of loans and overdrafts,
tax, national insurance contributions and business rates in the
wake of the foot and mouth crisis.
The FSB website says it is not just farmers who are experiencing
difficulties because of the crisis: "Businesses in the transport,
retail, leisure, tourism and service sectors in particular are
now facing problems due to the spread of foot and mouth cases."
The tourist and leisure industry has already lost millions
of pounds, as movement has been restricted in rural areas, and
major sporting fixtures such as the Cheltenham horse races have
been postponed or cancelled.
Whatever the final economic toll of the foot and mouth crisis,
it has already sparked a political crisis for Britain's Labour
government. The local council elections are due to take place
on May 3, and Prime Minister Tony Blair had been expected to call
a general election for the same day. He now has less than two
weeks to decide whether to proceed with plans for a May 3 general
election or to postpone it. Should he delay the poll until June
or even sometime in the autumn, the government would have to introduce
emergency legislation to postpone the local elections and allow
the existing councils to rule for a further 12 months.
Blair is keen to go to the polls and win a historic second
term for Labour on the back of a stable economy. Were the elections
to be postponed, there is the strong possibility that the economic
crisis already unfolding in the US and Japan could have a major
impact on Britain and create major problems for Blair.
Although a general election is not required until May 2002,
it is rare for a government to wait until the end of its first
term in office, and is generally regarded as a sign of weakness.
Sections of the media, most notably Rupert Murdochs' Sun
newspaper, have encouraged Labour to go to the polls now and clear
the way for a further shift to the right in its second term. However,
the electoral wheels that have been set in motion are meeting
with significant obstacles due to the foot and mouth crisis. Rural
MPs across all parties have expressed reservations about the advisability
of holding elections under conditions where those living in the
countryside could not participate. Labour's local government chief,
Jeremy Beecham, tried to dismiss this, declaring it to be a "non-issue."
He said, "Anyone can apply for a postal vote and post is
being delivered to outer reaches of farms. The Tories do not have
any door-to-door canvassers. They do it by phone."
Nevertheless the fear remains that the government could be
accused of fixing the election, given that most rural constituencies
return Conservative MPs. There is also the possibility that an
election held under these conditions would contravene the recently
enacted Human Rights Act, introduced by Labour to bring Britain
into line with the rest of Europe. The Act enshrines "free
and fair elections at reasonable intervals, in conditions which
will ensure free expression of opinion."
The rightwing nationalist and anti-European UK Independence
Party has already vowed to use the Human Rights Act to force Blair
to abandon plans for a May election.
See Also:
Europe's foot and mouth disease outbreak
was foreseeable and preventable
[8 March 2001]
An expert's view on why foot and mouth
disease has reemerged in Britain
[8 March 2001]
Foot and mouth disease spreads throughout
Europe
[1 March 2001]
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