Sheep 'buried alive' in Greece amid disease cull: official
The Peninsula
Athens: A senior veterinary official in Greece was replaced after it emerged that sheep had been buried alive in a disease control move, a regional...
Athens: A senior veterinary official in Greece was replaced after it emerged that sheep had been "buried alive" in a disease control move, a regional governor said Thursday.
"We received a complaint concerning live animals in the burial process," Dimitris Kouretas, governor of the central region of Thessaly, told reporters.
"This merits further investigation. For this reason I replaced the veterinary supervisor" responsible for the area of the incident, Kouretas said.
Officials since early July has been trying to contain an outbreak of sheep and goat plague near the central city of Trikala.
The disease known as Peste des Petits Ruminants, or PPR, is highly contagious to sheep and goats but does not affect humans. Meat and pasteurised milk are also safe to consume, officials said.