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    Afghan lab hosts U.S. Army veterinarians

    KABUL, AFGHANISTAN

    12.31.2010

    Courtesy Story

    ISAF Joint Command

    KABUL, Afghanistan– A group of U.S. Army veterinarians visited the Afghan Central Veterinary Research and Development Lab in Kabul Dec. 28 in order to better understand its capabilities.

    The visit included U.S. Army representatives from the Kentucky Agribusiness Development Team II, the Iowa Agribusiness Development Team, the 62nd Cooperative Medical Assistance Brigade and the 411th Civil Affairs Battalion.

    The knowledge gained from the visit will help the veterinarians design their workshops, where they train and work with Afghan vets on the provincial and district level. The Kentucky team works with vets from Panjshayr, Parwan and Kapisa provinces, where the Iowa team and 411th work with vets in Kunar and Kandahar.

    The tour was guided by Dr. Gulam Mohammad Ziay, the director of animal health and welfare at the lab, and Dr. Daad Mohammad Amir, the chief executive technical director for the Dutch Committee for Afghanistan, VetServ. Dr. Mohibullah Halimi, the director general of animal health and production from the Afghan Ministry of Agriculture Irrigations and Livestock, also attended.

    “Local vets are key players in responding to animal disease, a constant threat to Afghanistan, which is largely an agricultural country,” said U.S. Army Col. James Floyd, veterinarian with the Kentucky agribusiness team. “Most Afghan families outside of urban areas keep livestock, and in order to prevent disease in these animals, vets in those locations must reliably be able to diagnose their causes.”

    The Central Veterinary Research and Development Lab, which opened in 2009, is the main laboratory controlling 13 provincial labs and six regional labs in Afghanistan. The labs are used to diagnose and document diseases in livestock and report the findings to the Ministry of Agriculture Irrigations and Livestock.

    “This is about the future of Afghanistan,” said Ziay. “The country of Afghanistan needs to establish a standardized system designed to properly track and take samples from livestock, then test and diagnose diseases, reporting the finding to the government and we have done that; all that is left is implementation.”

    The Central Veterinary Research and Development Lab confirms the diagnosis made in the field by Afghan vets in the smaller provincial and regional labs as well as conducting training and drafting standardized regulations for those facilities.

    The facility has departments specializing in histopathology, toxicology, biochemistry, drug analysis, public health and a school to train laboratory technicians. The public health department deals with monitoring and testing products for import and export making sure they’re safe for human consumption or use.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 12.31.2010
    Date Posted: 12.31.2010 10:40
    Story ID: 62825
    Location: KABUL, AF

    Web Views: 68
    Downloads: 1

    PUBLIC DOMAIN