Niger: Two million animals vaccinated

GENEVA, Switzerland, March 20, 2014/African Press Organization (APO)/ — More than two million head of livestock belonging to almost 140,000 families in the Agadez and Tillabéry areas of the north and west of Niger have been treated in a major vaccination and deworming campaign. The undertaking, begun in January by Niger’s veterinary authorities with support from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the Red Cross Society of Niger, has just ended.

“By reducing the risk of an epidemic, we are helping to preserve the main source of income of communities that are primarily dependent on livestock farming,” said Jean-Nicolas Marti, head of the ICRC delegation in Niger.

In these arid zones, stricken by conflict in the past and still suffering a persistent lack of security and the effects of conflict situations in certain neighbouring countries, the economic balance remains fragile. Many herders and their livestock now in the Tillabéry area were pushed by the conflict and recent intercommunal tensions in Mali to cross the border into Niger, which has put further pressure on resources there.

“These areas are also subject to adverse weather conditions. This year, the rains have again been inadequate, which has increased the strain on grazing and water resources,” said Mathew Kenyanjui, head of the ICRC’s veterinary activities in Niger. “The vaccinations will protect the health, and therefore the market value, of the animals, which will give herders the option of bartering them for grain.”

This is the third consecutive year that such a campaign has been undertaken in Niger. The ICRC’s support consists in providing medicines, supplies, veterinary equipment and training, paying the allowances of 155 animal-health workers, and making available some 50 vehicles and fuel.

The operation extends into other nearby countries, such as Mali and Burkina Faso. In 2013, it reached more than four million animals in Niger, 3.5 million in northern Mali and nearly 200,000 in northern Burkina Faso.

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