The Minister of Agriculture, Animal Industry and Fisheries (MAAIF), Frank Tumwebaze, has revealed that the government is in the process of procuring vaccines to vaccinate cattle against the Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD) that has ravaged the cattle corridor in the country.

At least 36 Districts mostly known for cattle keeping have been placed under quarantine, stopping the movement of cattle and selling of beef because of the escalating spread of the FMD. The letter instituting the quarantine was issued by Maj Gen David Kyomukama, Permanent Secretary of MAAIF.

The Districts under the ongoing quarantine are Budaka, Bukedea, Bukomansimbi, Bunyangabu, Butaleja, Fortportal City, Gomba, Ibanda, Isingiro, Kabarole, Kassanda and Kayunga. Others are; Kazo, Kiboga, Kibuku, Kiruhura, Kumi, Kyankwanzi, Kyegegwa, Kyotera, Luuka, Lwengo, Lyantonde, Mbarara, Mbarara City, Mityana, Mpigi, Mubende, Nakaseke, Nakasongola, Naminsindwa, Ngora, Ntungamo, Rakai, Rwampara and Sembabule.

Meanwhile, veterinary experts from the Ministry are carrying out surveillance in several other Districts in western, eastern, central and northern regions.

Because of the announced quarantine, deputy Speaker Thomas Tayebwa last week raised the concern over the FMD. After drawing support from legislators mostly representing the constituents who are cattle keepers, Tayebwa directed Minister Tumwebaze to present a statement on the Government’s interventions to control the FMD outbreak.

Tumwebaze informed Parliament that although the National Agricultural Research Organisation (NARO) is on the right trajectory in developing vaccines from within the country, the Government needs to procure vaccines with immediate effect because the local remedy will take some time.

In the next one or two months, we expect to receive and dispatch 2.3 million doses of the vaccine to these affected and susceptible Districts for ring vaccination scale-up. I will again brief Parliament perhaps in the next month on the new policy positions Cabinet will have taken on the matter, said Tumwebaze.

Allow me to also inform you that NARO has started the process of formulating and developing our own FMD vaccine. These scientists have so far formulated two monovalent (a combination of two serotypes of FMD virus) FDM candidate vaccines and are due for evaluation and further scrutiny by the country’s regulatory bodies, he added.

The Minister revealed if the current processes, including trials at NARO become successful, the Government will further support the entity to produce for mass rollout as is happening with the anti-tick vaccine.

Currently, the Government has embarked on ring vaccination around the affected areas, animal movement control using checkpoints, closure of livestock markets, and, institution of quarantine measures.

At least 44 million animals, including cattle, sheep, goats and pigs, are requiring vaccination against the FMD hence a need for 88 million doses for the bi-annual exercise. The country, therefore, according to the Minister, needs at least $176 million (about UGX 668.6 billion) for the task since each dose costs $2 (about UGX 7,598).

Responding to earlier concerns by lawmakers on how the disease spread to various districts despite the available measures, Tumwebaze attributed it to the lack of cooperation and compliance among the farmers, cattle traders and district officials responsible for issuing animal movement permits.

Quite often, there is a clash and sometimes connivance between local political leaders, enforcement personnel and veterinary officers to flout these measures. This is how and why the disease further spreads and the quarantine duration inevitably gets prolonged, the Minister explained.

To control the disease in the medium term, Tumwebaze told Parliament that MAAIF will seek a supplementary budget to procure at least more than 10 million doses to cover all the affected and high-risk Districts and support District Veterinary Officials with disease surveillance tools, means of transport, facilitation and more personnel.

Any escalation of the FMD outbreak in Uganda will affect the animal industry in neighbouring countries where cattle keeping is done. Uganda’s neighbours, Rwanda, Kenya and Tanzania have many communities whose economic activity is cattle keeping, and there is fear that Ugandan animals and their products may be banned in the neighbouring countries.

We are also working with our neighbours in Tanzania to collaborate in the fight against FMD since it is a transboundary disease. The collaboration focuses on areas of synchronisation of vaccination calendars as well as coordination between our veterinary authorities in the clearance of animal movement and disease surveillance across the border, stated Tumwebaze.