Authorities foil entry of pork
Meat disguised as chicken
TAGBILARAN CITY,
Bohol, Nov 15 (PIA)—Authorities of the Department of Agriculture in Carmen
town, successfully intercepted and confiscated some 110 kilos of processed pork
meat consigned to a woman in Guinacot, Guindulman, amidst strengthening of
Bohol’s biosecurity measures against the entry of the dreaded African Swine
Fever (ASF).
While the products
were not tested for the presence of ASF, which could potentially spread the
virus if it were tested here, the consignee of the shipment voluntarily
surrendered the questionable shipment for destruction and proper disposition.
The shipment
apparently slipped through the inspections in the provinces and in Ubay, as it
was packed in two boxes and were stowed under the cargo hold of the running board
of Mega Bus Lines, from Quezon City.
It was only when the
bus arrived in Carmen, October 26, when another passenger took baggage from
under the bus’ cargo hold that the bus conductor noticed the two big boxes that
were wet and dripping, according to Provincial veterinarian Dr. Stella Marie
Lapiz, who shared the incident.
“It was good that we
earlier gathered bus operators and drivers, soliciting their help in making
sure now passenger brings in pork meat or processed pork meat, especially from
Luzon where several provinces have reportedly been under tight ASF watch,” Dr.
Lapiz remarked.
Knowing their
responsibility, the bus driver then immediately called on their local contacts
to properly inform the consignee about the package and to witness the opening
of the suspicious package, at the Carmen police station, where they had the
boxes placed for safe keeping.
That same day, with
the consignee and the local agriculture authorities, they opened the
consignment, which were declared frozen chicken mechanically deboned meat (MDM)
and went through the “fit for consumption” certificate by the National Meat
Inspection Service (NMIS) as shown by the attached control number 1063942-19.
The chicken meat,
with Dunn-Rite brand, imported by DEA Meat Trading was imported from Canada and
repacked by a company called Export Packers Limited of Canada, was later found
out to be containing 50 packs of pork longaniza, 40 packs of skinless
longaniza, 40 packs of pork longadog, 40 packs of chicken longadog, 20 packs of
baloney (bologna variation), 20 packs of siomai, 20 packs of embutido and 30
pieces of rolled ham.
Apart from
mis-declaration of goods, the consignment did not also have a shipping permit
and the company did not have a license to operate in the Philippines, and a
possible violation of the tariff and Customs Code of the Philippines, according
to Carmen Municipal Agriculturist Arlene Cabusao and veterinarian Dr. Jerome
Limbaga in their incident furnished report.
Having been lectured of the possible
implications of her keeping the consignment and the possibility of spreading a
virus so fatal to the local hogs and killing a multi-billion backyard industry,
the consignee voluntarily surrendered the shipment for proper disposition.
In the absence of laboratories
and the technology to test confirm the meat, authorities proceeded to burning
of the processed pork meat and burying them in a municipal owned lot in
town.
Over this, Dr. Lapiz
thanked the bus authorities for their vigilance even as the incident has also
presented an opportunity to change the loading cargo protocols for bus
companies.
While at present, a
team loads the cargoes and baggage in a bus’ hold, now a need for the team
traveling with the bus to be present during the loading, to make sure they know
which baggage may contain suspicious illegal shipments.
At that, hardwork
paid off for Bohol ASF campaign which has the Office of the provincial
Veterinaran (OPV) insisting that squealing and getting contagious about the
information on the dreaded hog disease is no over-reaction. (rahc/PIA-7/Bohol)
GRILLED
HOT. The confiscated processed pork disguised as mechanically deboned chicken
intercepted in Carmen, went through the proper disposal protocols to make sure
that the virus, if there are, could not survive the burning. These were later
buried to permanently seal the charred meat to discourage feral scavengers from
possibly carrying the virus that could survive. (PIABohol-MAO Carmen)


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