9月25日 (星期四)28°C 80
News Express
即時 財金 國際 本地 兩岸 News Express 天氣
日期:
《 上一篇       下一篇 》

Canada pauses cull of ostrich flock

25/9/2025 11:58
A flock of Canadian ostriches set to be culled, after two dead birds tested positive for avian flu, has been granted a last-minute stay of execution from Canada's highest court - for now. Canada's Supreme Court issued an order Wednesday granting an "interim-interim stay" of a culling order made on December 31. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency late last year ordered about 400 ostriches to be killed. Since then, Universal Ostrich Farms in Edgewood, British Columbia, has fought the order. It has lost multiple lower court rulings but has won some powerful supporters in the U.S. who have launched a campaign to stop the cull. Mehmet Oz, U.S. Administrator for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, offered in August to house the birds to study them. U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr has also argued against the cull. The culling had been scheduled for later on Wednesday, the farm's lawyer Umar Sheikh told Reuters. He said he was "obviously very,

very happy" with the order, but emphasized this is "a very uphill battle" and "this is just a very short, temporary breather." In the motion for a stay of the cull order, co-owners Karen Espersen and Dave Bilinski included an affidavit from a University of British Columbia professor arguing the ostriches have immunity to avian flu. The farm, whose owners say they specialize in studying ostrich antibodies, had argued culling the birds would cause "irreparable harm" and "permanently destroy unique genetics and a specialized research-based business." The ostriches' reprieve could be short-lived as the court has yet to determine the ostriches' fate. The food inspection agency maintains custody of the birds and has until October 3 to file its reply to the farm's application to the Supreme Court. The court said it will deal with the case on an expedited basis. In a statement Wednesday evening, the food inspection agency said it will comply w

ith the stay order. It said its "stamping out policy" plays a critical role in animal disease control and that it is working with police "for onsite security and follow up on ongoing threats of violence and death by apparent supporters of the ostrich farm." A severe bird flu outbreak in recent years resulted in millions of chickens, turkeys and other birds being killed in the U.S. to contain the spread of bird flu, which can infect humans and is fatal in poultry. The cullings contributed to egg prices at U.S. grocery stores climbing to a record high. Smaller commercial poultry flocks have been eliminated in Canada. (Reporting by Anna Mehler Paperny in Toronto; Additional






回主頁 關於我們使用條款及細則版權及免責聲明私隱政策 聯絡我們

新城廣播有限公司版權所有,不得轉載。
Copyright © Metro Broadcast Corporation Limited. All rights reserved.