A large number of Australian sheep seen at PK Livestock and Meat Company Warehouse in Razzaqabad, Karachi on Saturday, September 15, 2012. — Photo by PPI

KARACHI: Australia’s High Commissioner to Pakistan, Peter Heyward, said on Tuesday he was “surprised and concerned” about a cull of imported Australian sheep over disease fears, despite assurances from Australian diplomats that the animals are safe for human consumption

Heyward claimed the animals met Pakistan’s health requirements for imported sheep and they posed “no human or animal health risks”.

Pakistan ordered the cull on Sunday after the sheep, which had been turned away from Bahrain, tested positive for the salmonella and actinomyces bacteria, officials said.

Salmonella and actinomyces, said Heyward, “are part of normal gut flora and are present in livestock throughout the world, and in this form pose no threat to human health”.

But Karachi’s top administrator, Roshan Shaikh, said the cull of 21,268 sheep would continue, denying reports it had been halted.

“There is no suspension in the process, as the bacterial presence in the animal is confirmed and we can’t put human life in danger in Pakistan,” he said.

Five years ago, Pakistan culled thousands of chickens after they were found to be infected with the H5N1 “birdflu” virus.

Dr Abdul Hafeez Shaikh, veterinary chief of the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation, who is supervising the cull, said orders to dispose of the sheep had come “from the top”.

“We are busy in culling the infected sheep with no respite barring a few hours in nighttime when the area experiences power outages,” he said.

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