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Local officials urge government to curb animal smuggling

[Iraq] A ban on importing chicken has doubled the price of red meat. [Date picture taken: 06/23/2005] Afif Sarhan/IRIN
The cost of sheep has more than doubled in some parts of Iraq.
So many animals are being smuggled from southern Iraq into Iran that the price of meat has doubled, spurring officials in the southern governorate of Missan to call for tough anti-smuggling measures. “We’ll lose our animal resources within the next two or three years unless the government imposes tough measures and punishes smugglers,” said Dr Abdullah Hussein of the Missan Veterinary Hospital. According to Dr Juma'a Sharhan Mohamed, director of the Missan agriculture and animal research centre, the governorate has lost some 60 percent of its animal resources since the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq due to smuggling, mostly to Iran. “We've lost 20 percent of our cattle, 30 percent of our sheep and 10 percent of our goats,” said Mohamed, who added that these animals were highly prized in neighbouring countries for their traditionally low prices and high caloric value. Yashber Rahim Rajab, a butcher in Missan, explained that rampant smuggling had served to double the price of these commodities. “We were paying about $350 per cow, but now these are worth around US $700,” said Rajab. “And prices for sheep have increased from about US $75 to about US $200.” Locals, meanwhile, complain bitterly that the trend has made meat prohibitively expensive. “It’s about ID10,000 [about US $7] per kilo of beef, and I can’t afford that,” said Hammad Ali, a school guard. According to Dr Sabah Ali of the local health directorate, however, the current lack of red meat will not seriously impact the health of residents, given the plentiful supply of alternate sources of protein such as fish, chicken and birds. Border officials, meanwhile, say they need more resources to stem the smuggling. “We can't secure the entire border 24 hours a day,” said one border officer on condition of anonymity. “Some of these gangs have more weapons than we do, which makes it difficult to confront them.”

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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