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Top Inspector Defends Ban On U.S. Meat

The Federal Veterinary Service said it will not yield to U.S. attempts to make it lift health-related import bans on meat imports, saying the measures stem from real safety concerns, not politics.

Service head Sergei Dankvert said in an interview that meat trade issues between Russia and the United States should be resolved by business people and veterinarians, not politicians.

"Strangely enough, we have to argue not with veterinarians, but with officials," Dankvert said Tuesday. "The more the situation is pegged to politics, the worse it becomes."

Russia is the largest export market for the $55 billion U.S. poultry industry and a major importer of pork and beef. It has banned all meat imports from several U.S. states on concerns related to the A/H1N1 flu virus, commonly known as swine flu.

"We are not going to yield to any enforcement," Dankvert said in response to the comments from Washington.

The service, together with the Russian poultry market lobby, plans to discuss issues of U.S. meat safety guarantees with producers and veterinarians at an annual meeting of the World Organization for Animal Health in Paris this week. Several countries have banned meat imports since the outbreak of swine flu even though the virus has not been spread by hogs and pork.

Dankvert said that despite the Russian bans, U.S. meat imports had suffered little damage.

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