TACLOBAN CITY,
Aug. 17 (PNA) – No single local government-run abattoir in Eastern Visayas
passed the accreditation standards this year, raising concerns that some meat
might not be suitable for human consumption, the National Meat Inspection
Service (NMIS) reported.
NMIS
Regional Director Orlando Ongsotto said some accredited slaughterhouse failed
to restore their facilities after these were destroyed by super typhoon Yolanda
in 2013.
Consequently,
areas without government-accredited abattoirs cannot market their product
outside their city or town, according to NMIS.
“Only 45
percent of our 143 cities and towns in the region have abattoirs. Other areas
do the slaughtering of livestock and poultry products in houses, public or
under a tree,” Ongsotto said.
Local abattoirs
are still practicing old concept, which are open type, without partitions and
using manual operational system.
The official
has called on mayors to appoint meat inspectors to ensure meat safety even with
the absence of slaughter houses. Latest NMIS report shows that 60 percent of
the region’s 136 towns have no meat inspectors.
Under the
law, all livestock and poultry products slaughtered for food should be subject
to veterinary inspection and examination before distribution and sale.
“However,
the local government cannot effectively implement meat inspection if there’s no
slaughterhouse in an area,” Ongsotto added.
Next year,
the NMIS hopes that four areas – Catbalogan City in Samar, Naval in Biliran,
Tacloban City in Leyte, and San Roque in Northern Samar – will have accredited
slaughterhouses as construction kicks off this year.
Some LGUs
are recipients of post-Yolanda rehabilitation projects, but no single budget
has been released so far for abattoir construction, according to Ongsotto. Some
LGUs will also get financial assistance to build slaughterhouses through the
bottom-up budgeting.
“The
challenge with LGU is funding constraint. Government facility is always a
service. It’s hard to maintain a facility if it’s not generating income,” the
official stressed.
FPV/SARWELL Q. MENIANO
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