Germany Faces First Foot-and-Mouth Disease Outbreak Since 1988 in Brandenburg
Highly contagious virus detected in water buffalo herd near Berlin prompts widespread containment measures and animal culling.
- Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) was confirmed in a water buffalo herd in Märkisch-Oderland, Brandenburg, marking Germany's first outbreak in decades.
- Authorities have established a 3-kilometer quarantine zone and a 10-kilometer surveillance area around the affected farm to prevent further spread.
- Over 200 animals, including water buffalo, pigs, goats, and cattle, have been culled as a precautionary measure in Brandenburg's containment efforts.
- Berlin's Tierpark and Zoo have temporarily closed, and the Green Week agriculture fair has removed cloven-hoofed animals from its program to minimize risks.
- Federal and state officials, including Agriculture Minister Cem Özdemir, are coordinating investigations into the virus's origin and implementing strict transport bans for livestock.











































