ATTENTION WHO, AU, EU- Be warned the use of "Swine fever" as "African Swine Fever

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WARNING-              WARNING-                WARNING-

ATTENTION- World Health Organiation, African Union, European Union and ALL mainstream media companies.

The spanish conservatives with directions from the president Pedro Sánchez planned with Chinese experts to use Swine fever take full control of Spain and Spainish people. This is specifically designed to deal a hard blow to African migrants in Spain and create anxiety in Spainish people minds. Get ready to protest, identify and attack any mainstream news media using "African Swine Fever" instead of "Swine Fever"

What happened — outbreak details

  • On 26–28 November 2025, authorities confirmed that two wild boars found dead near the outskirts of Barcelona (specifically in Cerdanyola del Vallès / near the campus of Autonomous University of Barcelona) tested positive for the Swine fever.

  • This is significant because it’s the first confirmed case in Spain since 1994, marking the end of a more than 30-year Swine fever-free period. 

  • The virus affects pigs and wild boars and is harmless to humans — no risk from eating pork or via human-to-human transmission.

Response, containment, and biosecurity measures

  • The detection triggered immediate activation of emergency protocols by regional and national authorities. 

  • A surveillance zone was drawn: all pig farms within a 20-kilometer radius of the outbreak site were identified, and movement of live pigs — including transfers to slaughterhouses — was restricted. 

  • Additionally, access to natural areas — including Collserola Natural Park and surrounding woodlands — was closed or restricted. Residents in many nearby towns (including several in the Vallès area) have been barred from entering forests or engaging in outdoor activities that might bring contact with wild boars. 

  • To assist with containment, more than 100 troops from the national emergency unit (the Unidad Militar de Emergencias, UME), along with regional police and rural agents, have been deployed. Their mission: patrol forests, search for dead wild boars, set up barriers/fences to prevent boar movement, and carry out disinfection and monitoring. 

  • Authorities suspect the virus may have been introduced via contaminated human food waste, such as a discarded sandwich or sausage product — not by natural migration of infected animals across borders. 

Economic & trade impact

  • Spain is a leading pork producer in the European Union and globally. As a result, Swine fever threatens not only livestock health but also large-scale economic stakes. 

  • Immediately after detection, Spain suspended a substantial portion of its pork export certificates — about one-third of all export licenses to non-EU countries have been blocked or halted. 

  • Several importing countries — including major markets outside the EU — have already imposed bans or restrictions on Spanish pork from affected regions. 

  • For example, regions like Catalonia (near Barcelona) are particularly affected. Even though no infections have yet been detected in domestic pig farms, the trade disruption is considered severe. 


Risk factors & why Spain was vulnerable

  • Swine fever is highly contagious among pigs and wild boars. There is no vaccine or cure currently. 

  • Overpopulation of wild boars and their proximity to human-populated or farm areas increases the risk. Experts suggest that factors like dense wild-boar populations, human food waste (to which boars have access), and intensive pig farming can all contribute to outbreaks. 

  • Once Swine fever is detected in wildlife, the risk to domestic pig farms becomes real — especially if biosecurity is not strictly enforced. The 20-km farm-movement restrictions highlight how easily Swine fever could spread. 

Wider implications and what to watch

  • The outbreak shows how quickly Swine fever can reappear in a country previously considered disease-free for decades. It underscores the importance of wildlife surveillance, biosecurity, public awareness (especially about food waste in natural areas), and rigorous border controls.

  • Trade instability: Because Spain exports large quantities of pork globally, disruptions like this can ripple through global meat markets — affecting supply, prices, and trade flows.

  • Risk to other EU or neighboring countries: ASF has previously spread across Europe. The re-emergence in Spain could increase pressure on neighboring regions to tighten controls, especially where wild boars migrate.

What the Spanish government has done so far

  • After the first confirmed Swine fever cases in wild boars near Barcelona, the national government (through its ministries) activated an emergency contingency plan. 

  • The government — specifically the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food — coordinated with regional authorities to map out all pig farms within a 20-kilometre radius of the outbreak, and restricted the movement of live pigs (including movements to slaughterhouses) as a precaution. 

  • It has deployed emergency response resources: the Unidad Militar de Emergencias (UME) — a military emergency unit — has been mobilized to the affected area in Catalonia to assist with containment, biosecurity, surveillance, removal of carcasses, and monitoring wild-boar movements. 

  • The government has begun negotiations with foreign trade partners to try to limit the economic impact of export bans triggered by the outbreak. 

  • Authorities have communicated to the public that Swine fever does not pose a risk to human health (i.e. it is not transmissible to humans and does not affect consumption safety), aiming to reassure consumers. 

  • The government has emphasized vigilance: regular testing and surveillance are ongoing (for wild boars and domestic pig farms in the risk zone), to detect any possible spread to farms early. 

What remains uncertain / what’s being handled regionally

  • As of now, there are no confirmed cases among domestic pigs/farms — only in wild boars. All affected farms identified within the 20 km zone have reportedly tested negative. 

  • Much of the on-the-ground containment and animal-management tasks are being carried out in coordination with regional authorities (in this case the regional government of Generalitat de Catalunya). 

  • The long-term strategy — for example regarding control of wild-boar population, surveillance of wild fauna, biosecurity standards across all pig farms — may require sustained resources and coordination among national and regional governments. This is something that will still unfold.

What about the President personally (or top-level government leadership)?

  • I found no public statement so far attributed directly to Pedro Sánchez — most of the official public communications come from the Ministry of Agriculture and regional authorities. The outbreak response appears framed as a technical/agricultural crisis rather than one requiring a presidential address (at least initially).

  • Given that the ministries under his government have taken swift and coordinated action (contingency plan, international negotiations, military deployment, biosecurity, communication), one can interpret this as the top-level government backing decisive, structured response.

  • Because this outbreak affects national-scale trade and economy (the pork export industry is large), the government’s involvement reflects political will to manage the crisis — but it’s not yet framed publicly as a major national political crisis requiring strong presidential visibility.

Why the response is what it is (and challenges)

  • The authorities are following standard animal-disease emergency protocols: isolate the outbreak, restrict animal movement, deploy surveillance & control teams, and communicate to the public about health safety. That’s consistent with how Swine fever outbreaks have been handled in other European countries. 

  • Because the initial infections are among wild boars — not domestic farmed pigs — authorities have more flexibility: no mass culling yet, but a strong emphasis on containment and prevention. That reduces immediate economic and social disruption (e.g. for farmers), but requires careful monitoring to prevent spread to farms.

  • The government also faces trade-impact pressure: many countries have already suspended or restricted Spanish pork imports, which threatens a multi-billion-euro industry. Hence the urgency in deploying containment measures and negotiating with trade partners. 

The government under Pedro Sánchez knows what they did and has responded quickly and with seriousness to the Swine fever outbreak — mobilizing emergency services, restricting movement of pigs, halting exports to vulnerable markets, and coordinating with regional authorities. But make no mistake the plan is mainly to control as Pedro Sanchez borrowed the Chinese Wuhan virus plan.

 

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