Posted on 02/10/2020 7:08:48 PM PST by HK_Kai_Chung
STERLING, Va. U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agriculture specialists recently seized a package of tiny dead birds in a passengers baggage at Washington Dulles International Airport.
The traveler arrived on a flight from Beijing, China January 27 and was destined to an address in Prince Georges County, Maryland. During a baggage examination, CBP agriculture specialists discovered a package with pictures of a cat and dog that the passenger said was cat food. The package contained a bunch of unknown small birds, about 2.5 to 3.5 inches in length.
The birds from China are prohibited for import due to the potential threat of highly pathogenic avian influenza. The avian products were seized on behalf of U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and destroyed by incineration, with USDA approval.
These dead birds are prohibited from importation to the United States as unprocessed birds pose a potentially significant disease threat to our nations poultry industries and more alarmingly to our citizens as potential vectors of avian influenza, said Casey Durst, Director of Field Operations for CBPs Baltimore Field Office. Customs and Border Protection agriculture specialists continue to exercise extraordinary vigilance every day in their fight to protect our nations agricultural and economic prosperity from invasive pests and animal diseases.
Customs and Border Protection agriculture specialists protect our nations agricultural industries from a variety of potential threats every day, including from highly pathogenic animal diseases that threaten our nations economy, said Casey Durst, Director of Field Operations for CBPs Baltimore Field Office. CBP agriculture specialists continue to exercise extraordinary vigilance in their fight to protect our nations agriculture and economic prosperity from invasive pests and animal diseases.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), USDAs Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (USDA-APHIS) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) regulate the importation of animals and animal products into the United States. Consignees and importers should consult their websites to ensure they comply with licensing, certification, and importation requirements.
CBP agriculture specialists perform a critical border security role in safeguarding Americas agricultural and natural resources from harmful pests and plant diseases. They have extensive training and experience in the biological sciences and agricultural inspection, inspect tens of thousands of international air passengers, and air and sea cargoes nationally being imported to the United States.
During a typical day last year, CBP agriculture specialists across the nation seized 4,695 prohibited plant, meat, animal byproduct, and soil, and intercepted 314 insect pests at U.S. ports of entry.
BobL wrote:
“Lovely, but why are people from China STILL allowed to come to Texas?”
Washington Dulles airport.
Not Dallas.
We need a GIF of Peter Boyle saying “Holy Crap”.
“Washington Dulles airport...Not Dallas.”’
Still too close.
Or.... maybe inoculated with weaponized coronavirus? Crude is the way these chi-coms roll. See: Kim Jong’s dead brother killed in a airport by two party girls with smeared nerve agent on their rubber gloves.
Well, my mouth is watering...and not in a good way!
Yes, few months ago I went to an Asian store and purchase Japanese noodle (did not check box at store). When I got home and was preparing a meal I glanced at the box and in small letters it said “MADE IN CHINA”. I thought hell no, I’m not eating these noodles, so into the trash it went.
Good call.
What could possibly go wrong?...
I don’t get chills easily....but.....yikes!
bioweapon material
OMG I cant believe what these people eat in other countries!!! YUCK!!!!
They look like fetuses, maybe of chickens.
Why would anyone feed that to a pet?
Thank you. My ability to read Chinese is *extremely* limited.
The fact that CBP incinerated the birds on behalf of the USDA WITHOUT any testing is also puzzling.
“Some Chinese brands like to use Japanese on their product packaging since people there tend to trust Japanese brands more than domestic brands.”
China does a lot of false packaging for their domestic market. Everything from baby formula to noodles to cars because the Chinese will pay more for what they think is a better product.
One video I saw showed a dealership re-badging a Chinese car with Ford nameplates and logo, including all interior badges.
Since Chinese cars are blatant rip offs of imported models no one can tell the difference unless they look at the fine details.
Most Chinese cars are junk long before they hit 100,000 miles. Most need major repairs by 25,000 miles...or sooner.
They even showed one car with Mack badging!
An agent immediately came to escort me down to baggage claim to find my suitcase. He took me to a special room with plenty of seats and others waiting. When I was called I took my suitcase to humongous machines, where I removed the offending product before my luggage went through a giant scanner.
As I left I couldnt help seeing a woman from Africa going through her open suitcase removing piles of disgusting bush meat.
They probably figured it was safest to just incinerate the birds immediately...
If those are “quail”, they must get harvested really young in China...
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