DA personnel, cops set up checkpoints to prevent spread of African Swine Fever


As the government still awaits the arrival of vaccines, checkpoints will be set up in various parts of the Luzon to contain the spread of African Swine Fever in Batangas, the Department of Agriculture announced on Wednesday, Aug. 14.

DA Secretary Francisco P. Tiu Laurel Jr. said the additional border controls are designed to halt the movement of diseased hogs, which have been a significant factor in the rapid spread of ASF in Batangas. 

“The checkpoints are a temporary measure while the government awaits the arrival of ASF vaccines, a process that could take a few weeks,” said Laurel.

“We have the funds to procure the vaccines and the emergency funds to indemnify hog raisers adversely affected by the resurgence of the ASF virus. The vaccine procurement is essential for controlling the outbreak but acknowledged the delay in securing those vaccines,” he added.

The rapid spread of ASF in Batangas is suspected to have been exacerbated by unscrupulous hog traders selling diseased pigs.

DA Assistant Secretary for Swine and Poultry Constante Palabrica explained that the border controls will help prevent the transport of other diseased animals, including birds.

“We have set up additional livestock quarantines and will keep it there at least until December 31. Policemen along with Bureau of Animal Industry and other DA personnel will man the checkpoints,” said Palabrica. 

The new ASF outbreak has led several towns in Batangas to declare a state of calamity to access emergency funds, whose availability is critical for addressing the immediate impacts of the outbreak and for managing the disease’s spread.

Palabrica said the DA has identified central burial sites for hogs infected with ASF or those that have died from the virus. 

The measure is part of the broader effort to control and eventually eradicate the virus, which has severely impacted the hog industry since it was first reported in 2019.

The ASF outbreak has had a devastating effect on the national hog population, which dropped from 12.7 million in 2019 to an estimated 9.9 million by the end of 2023. 

According to Bureau of Animal Industry (BAI) monitoring, ASF has spread across all 17 regions of the Philippines and affected 74 provinces. As of August 8, 64 municipalities in 22 provinces have reported active ASF cases.