SAN PEDRO CITY, Laguna, Philippines — Officials of the agricultural town of Siniloan in Laguna province served eight “lechon” (roast pigs), taken from local farms, in a boodle fight on Tuesday to ease fears caused by the African swine fever.
Greggy Saliba, Siniloan information officer, said the local government wanted to publicly declare the town’s hog farms as “swine fever-free” and correct misconceptions on the animal disease.
Saliba said concerns among consumers were particularly high in Siniloan, the town being on Laguna’s boundary with Rizal province, where the first cases of swine fever were recorded in August.
Slow sales
The boodle fight was joined by around 200 government employees at Siniloan’s town plaza.
According to Saliba, Siniloan has only 10 backyard hog farms although it hosts an animal feed factory that supplies the needs of other towns.
He said that since the swine fever outbreak in Rizal, pork sales in the public market had slowed down.
In the capital town of Sta. Cruz, market vendors who normally sold three to four pigs a day could now sell only one.
The government said the swine fever virus could not be transferred from hogs to humans or any other animal.
Arnel de Mesa, Department of Agriculture director in Calabarzon (Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal, Quezon), said protocols were in place to prevent the spread of swine fever to other parts of the region. —Maricar Cinco