Tanzania incinerates 6,400 Kenya-sourced chicks

Tanzania police incinerated 6,400 one-day-old chicks from Kenya, on suspicion they could spread bird flu. PHOTO | THE CITIZEN | NATION MEDIA GROUP

What you need to know:

  • The chicks worth Sh577, 000 were impounded on Monday at Namanga Border Post in Longido district, Arusha region, before being burnt on Tuesday.
  • The Tanzanian government banned chick importation in 2007.
  • The chicks were owned by Arusha-based businesswomen Mary Matia, who is in police custody.

Veterinarians in Tanzania have condemned the country's s decision to burn 6,400 chicks which were illegally imported from Kenya.

The chicks worth Sh577, 000 (Tsh12.5 million) were impounded on Monday at Namanga Border Post in Longido district, Arusha region, before they were burnt on Tuesday.

Expressing his concern, executive director of a non-governmental organisation, Tanzania Animal Welfare Society Dr Thomas Kahema suggested that there were alternative was to curb outbreak of animal diseases such as bird flu apart from burning the imported chicks.

DISEASES

According to him the best option was to return the chicks to the primary owner, if the reason was to really protect outbreak of diseases.

“The decision has distorter image of the country to our neighbour, no one expected if that would be possible,” he told The Citizen.

Other concerns were from social media as many users expressed their concerns on the government decision.

The chicks were owned by Arusha-based businesswomen Mary Matia, who is in police custody.

On Tuesday, Northern Zone veterinarian Obedi Nyasebwa said that the aim was to curb outbreaks of animal diseases such as bird flu.

BANNED

The Tanzanian government banned chick importation in 2007.

“The chicks will be burned in accordance with Animal Diseases Act, 2003,” he said.

Namanga Border Post Tanzania Revenue Authority assistant manager Edwin Iwato said the owner of the vehicle that carried the chicks would be fined.

Senior veterinarian Medard Tarimo said complaints about chick smuggling had been rife. “They are mostly smuggled at night hours, endangering the health of Tanzanians since we know avian influenza has broken out in neighbouring Uganda.”