Australian farmers nabbed for smuggling pig semen in shampoo bottles

File picture: Edgard Garrido/Reuters

File picture: Edgard Garrido/Reuters

Published Aug 14, 2019

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Canberra - Two pig farmers in Western Australia who illegally

imported wild pig semen from Denmark using shampoo bottles have been

sentenced to three and two years in prison, respectively. 

Torben Soerensen and Henning Laue, employees of the Australia-based

pig farm GD Pork, were jailed on Tuesday for biosecurity breaches

carried out between May 2009 and March 2017, Australian Agriculture

Minister Bridget McKenzie said on Wednesday.

The pair's illegal act put the country's pork industry "at serious

risk," she said.

The duo had pleaded guilty to multiple charges of aiding the illegal

importation of boar semen over several years. Soerensen, GD Pork's

managing director, was sentenced to three years in prison, while

Laue, the production manager, was sentenced to two years. 

The company, which is currently in liquidation, was fined 500,000

Australian dollars (340,000 US dollars).

The pig semen was brought into the country by Danish investors and

used in the company's artificial breeding program. With the imported

semen, at least 199 sows were inseminated, resulting in the spawning

of more than 2,000 piglets, Australian broadcaster ABC reported. 

Mackenzie said GD Pork had imported the semen illegally to get an

unfair advantage over competitors with new genetic diversity.

The case shows "a disturbing disregard for the laws that protect the

livelihoods of Australia's 2,700 pork producers" and the penalties

send "a clear message that breaches of Australia's biosecurity rules

will not be tolerated."

"Boar semen can potentially contain a number of exotic diseases,

including Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome (PRRSV),

which could devastate Australian breeding herds," she said.

dpa

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