
Court docket rejected the applying to forestall BC ostrich on avian flu
A judge of the federal court has provoked a challenge that has stopped killing about 400 ostrich on a farm in the British Columbia, which led to an outbreak of avian flu.
The farm received an outbreak of avian flu but the owners argued that they had not taken a widespread risk

A judge of the federal court has provoked a challenge that has stopped killing about 400 ostrich on a farm in the British Columbia, which led to an outbreak of avian flu.
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency ordered Kalli at the end of last year after the outbreak of the avian flu, but the court allowed the judicial review to be pending in January.
The family owner of the farm has said that birds should be saved as they have developed herd immunity and can contribute to the fight against avian flu.
However, the court today ruled that the decisions of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency were appropriate and procedurally fair, the judge said that “the courts are usually out of scientific debate.”
The owners of the farm say that the birds who escape from the flu have been recovered and are happy and healthy.
More than 8.7 million birds have been closed in hundreds of farms in BC in BC, most of them are commercial, as the spring of 2022 caused the first outbreak of highly infectious form of avian flu.