Foot and Mouth update

Posted by Cath Flitcroft on 14/09/2007
Scenes in 2001. Photo: Environment Agency

The "precautionary" cull of animals had taken place at Stroude Farm, Egham, near the scene of the outbreak of the disease discovered on Wednesday. Footpaths within the protection zone remain closed.

The farm in Egham comprises a number of separate parcels of land and there
has subsequently been a change in the Protection and Surveillance Zones.

A single Protection Zone has been put in place extending 3 kilometers around
each of the parcels of land, with a Surveillance Zone of 10 kilometers
radius beyond that. Footpaths are being closed in the Protection Zone.
Cattle on the affected farm are being culled, together with animals on an
adjacent farm.

The Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (DEFRA) has said that it is likely that the virus is the same strain as found in the August outbreak at the Pirbright research centre, approximately ten miles from the site of the new outbreak.

Despite this new outbreak the countryside remains open. Climbers and walkers should continue their activities as normal but check the DEFRA website first for guidance if you are planning on visiting the Surrey region.

The FMD outbreak in 2001 was the BMC’s most significant access concern of that year and we committed a substantial amount of our resources to managing access across the country. The BMC is keen to avoid a repeat of the actions that occurred in 2001, when blanket closure of the countryside had an extremely wide-ranging impact on the rural economy of the UK. The BMC recommends in the strongest terms that it would be completely wrong to implement blanket closures if the disease spreads, and any further closures must be evidence-based rather than on perception.

DEFRA has a protocol for closures, which states that a proportional approach will be taken, with access restrictions kept to a minimum. Recreational use of the countryside was not proven to be associated with the commencement of the FMD outbreak in 2001 or the subsequent spread of the disease. The BMC will therefore be working to ensure that key recreational and tourist areas are not closed to the public if this outbreak should spread.


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