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Saudi bans poultry imports from Ghana, et al

We Need Money To Cater For Our Families – Poultry Farmers To Government
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The Saudi Food and Drug Authority (SFDA) of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has tightened controls on poultry and table egg imports in one of the most extensive updates in recent years, banning poultry products from 40 countries including Ghana.

The import-ban list also confirms that imports from these countries are fully prohibited, with additional restrictions imposed on 16 other nations amid ongoing global disease concerns in the Saudi territory.

The ban was issued as part of precautionary measures aimed at protecting public health and reinforcing food safety in Saudi Arabia’s local market.

The SFDA stressed that the list of restricted countries is subject to periodic review in line with global health developments.

Among the primary concerns cited are outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian influenza. This approach reflects continuous monitoring of the global epidemiological situation and regulatory adjustments based on evolving disease patterns.

40 countries under full ban

The 40 countries included on the full ban list are Ghana, Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Germany, Indonesia, Iran, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Bangladesh, Taiwan, Djibouti, South Africa, China, Iraq, Palestine, Vietnam, Cambodia, Kazakhstan and Cameroon.

Others are South Korea, North Korea, Laos, Libya, Myanmar, the United Kingdom, Egypt, Mexico, Mongolia, Nepal, Niger, Nigeria, India, Hong Kong, Japan, Burkina Faso, Sudan, Serbia, Slovenia, Ivory Coast and Montenegro.

Partial ban covering specific regions in 16 countries

In addition to the full ban, a partial ban has been imposed targetting specific provinces and cities in 16 countries – including Australia, the United States, Italy, Belgium, Bhutan, Poland, Togo, Denmark, Romania, Zimbabwe, France, the Philippines, Canada, Malaysia, Austria and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

According to Saudi authorities, restrictions in the partial-ban category apply only to designated states and cities rather than nationwide prohibitions.

 Chamber of Agribusiness Ghana (CAG) position

The Chamber of Agribusiness Ghana (CAG), responding to the ban, said Ghana’s inclusion in the list alongside major economies like Germany, Japan, the UK and China among others reflects the non-discriminatory and risk-based character of the SFDA’s posture.

In that vein, CAG, has called on government and key stakeholders including the Food and Drugs Authority (FDA) and Ghana Standards Authority (GSA), Veterinary Council and MoFA to as a matter of urgency acknowledge that the Saudi import ban is not merely a trade matter, but illustrates the need for Ghana to build and deepen a regulatory infrastructure that sustains and demonstrate credibility to the international community.

CAG’s CEO, Anthony Morrison, explained that Ghana stands at a consequential juncture. According to him, the Saudi poultry import ban is the latest and most responsible decision to protect citizens of that country.

He said countries that leave their populations exposed to preventable disease due to lack of investment in world-class food safety and animal health systems will not command global market access.

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