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Two people suspected of smuggling infected mink out of Denmark
Denmark’s mink farmers are mourning what they say is the death of their industry after a government order to cull all of their stocks over a mutated variant of the new coronavirus.

Warning: this report contains images some may find upsetting.

On Saturday, angry farmers and supporters plan to demonstrate against the cull in the country’s two biggest cities, Copenhagen and Aarhus, with 400 tractors expected to roll in.

“We’re in shock,” Marianne Nørgaard Sørensen tells AFP. “Words can’t describe the nightmare we’ve been through.”

She and her husband, who has been a mink farmer since 1993, live in North Jutland, the region in northwestern Denmark home to the most mink farms.

Like millions of others across the country, their 27,000 minks were slaughtered in early November and around two thirds of the country’s stocks have been culled to date.

“We wrote to the veterinary authorities to ask for two more days but then they came … and took over. It was very harsh, video of the slaughter went online,” she recalls.

“If we had only had two more days, we would have done it in a more humane way.”

Denmark’s mink breeding began in the 1930s, when farmers sought to diversify their business as butter and meat prices tumbled.

Boosted by a favourable climate, the sector peaked in the 1960s, when there were some 6,000 farms compared to around 1,000 today.

With three times more minks than people, Denmark is now the world’s biggest exporter of pelts, ringing up sales of 670 million euros annually, and the second-biggest producer behind China.

The animal is prized for its soft fur, used in the fashion industry for coats, collars and hats. Wearing fur remains especially popular in China, while attitudes have shifted in the West over the years.

But minks have posed a problem in the fight against the new coronavirus. The animals can catch the virus, and also pass it back to humans.

In early November, the Danish government sounded the alarm when it announced a nationwide cull of its 15 to 17 million minks, saying they could carry a mutated variant of the virus that could render any future vaccine for humans less effective.

The strain, dubbed ‘Cluster 5’, was detected in 12 people in August and September in North Jutland, and the government swiftly imposed strict restrictions on the region.

Since then, no new cases of the strain have been detected in humans or minks, the health ministry said Thursday, saying it has “most likely been eradicated”.

The cull has turned into a fiasco for the government.

It was forced to admit last week that it had no legal power to order the killing of healthy minks outside the contaminated zones, leading to the resignation on Wednesday of the agriculture minister and dealing a blow to public confidence in the government.

Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen has nonetheless insisted the cull is “non-negotiable”, and her government is now preparing legislation to make it possible — by banning mink farming until January 1st, 2022.

Meanwhile, in another part of Jutland, Erik Vammen has held off killing his animals so far, even though that means he forgoes the extra compensation paid to those who cull rapidly.

“At night when I see the lights of a car I’m afraid it’s the police,” admits this 60-something who inherited his mink farm from his father and grandfather before him.

Since neither his nor the neighbouring farms have had any cases of coronavirus, his minks are not a priority. But he knows that “if I don’t kill the minks they’ll come and kill them.”

He says the state’s financial compensation is not enough to make up for his lost livelihood.

And, he argues, how can you have confidence in authorities who impose measures without any legal basis?

Few believe the industry will ever recover, even if mink farms are authorised to open again in 2022.

Most agree it would take more than 10 years to cultivate minks with top quality pelts.

“There’s no hope for the future,” laments Nørgaard Sørensen.

The world’s largest fur auction house, Kopenhagen Fur, said it is planning a “controlled shutdown” for the next two or three years.

There are, however, those happy to see the industry disappear: animal welfare associations, who have long criticised the fur farms as cruel.

They argue the furry creatures suffer from overcrowding in small cages.

“Danish fur breeders have put millions of euros into marketing and creating demand for fur by telling fairy tales about how the animals are treated. Once we don’t produce fur in Europe this misleading marketing will disappear,” says Joh Vinding, head of the animal rights association Anima.

“I don’t think we’ll see mink farming in Denmark ever again.”

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