http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/indonesia-lifts-ban-on-swine-pork-imports/358627

February 14, 2010 
Arti Ekawati

 
Indonesia Lifts Ban on Swine, Pork Imports

The Trade Ministry has lifted a ban on imports of swine, pork and derivatives 
that was issued last year because of concerns about the H1N1 virus. 

"With the new regulation, all regulations and decrees on the temporary ban of 
the swine products are automatically lifted," Trade Minister Mari Elka Pangestu 
said on Sunday. 

The decision to lift the import ban was made because there have been no cases 
of the virus spreading from swine or pork to humans, Mari said. 

The Trade Ministry temporarily banned imports of swine and pork in May 2009 
after the Agriculture Ministry issued a similar decree in April 2009. 

However, the World Health Organization said in June last year that animal 
products handled in a hygienic way were not a source of the H1N1 virus, 
commonly called swine flu, and would be safe to consume. 

Mangku Sitepoe, a senior veterinary expert from the Bogor Institute of 
Agriculture (IPB), said the import ban should not have been applied in the 
first place because it had been scientifically proven that the virus is unable 
to spread from swine to humans. 

To say that humans could be infected by eating pork or pork products was wrong, 
Mangku said. 

"The truth is, the virus spreads only from human to human and from human to 
swine, not vice versa, not yet," he told the Jakarta Globe on Sunday. 

"Therefore, at present people should not be afraid to consume pork and other 
swine products." 

Mangku said the WHO had designated the H1N1 virus a pandemic for three reasons 
- the virus spreads from human to human, it is a mutated form of the same virus 
that caused a worldwide influenza pandemic in 1918, and it has spread across 
many countries. 

According to WHO data, as of Feb. 7, 2010, 212 countries and territories had 
reported laboratory-confirmed cases of the H1N1 virus, resulting in 15,292 
deaths. 

Indonesia imported 23,000 tons of pork in 2008, the Trade Ministry said. 

In the same year, the country exported 29,000 tons of live swine and 48,700 
tons of pork. 

Most of the live swine and pork was exported to neighboring Singapore. 

The majority of the swine in Indonesia is raised by small-scale, family-run 
farms. 

There are about 7.4 million pigs in Indonesia, with about 1.6 million in East 
Nusa Tenggara, according to the Agriculture Ministry. 

There are 900,000 pigs in Bali, 876,000 pigs in West Kalimantan, 760,000 pigs 
in North Sumatra, 570,000 pigs in Papua and 530,000 pigs in South Sulawesi. 

Most of the remaining pigs are in Java.

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