ASEAN OBJECTIVES FOR VETERINARY LEGISLATION ASEAN Secretariat Modernising veterinary
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Transcript ASEAN OBJECTIVES FOR VETERINARY LEGISLATION ASEAN Secretariat Modernising veterinary
ASEAN OBJECTIVES FOR
VETERINARY LEGISLATION
ASEAN Secretariat
OIE Global Conference on Veterinary Legislation Modernising veterinary
Legislation for Good Governance
Djerba, Tunisia, 2010
One Vision, One Identity, One Community
Outline
Introduction
ASEAN Views on TADs and Zoonotic
ASEAN Community Building
ASEAN Sectoral Working Group on Livestock
ASEAN Objectives on Veterinary Legislation
Conclusion
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ASEAN Member States
Brunei Darussalam
Cambodia
Indonesia
Lao PDR
Malaysia
Myanmar
Philippines
Singapore
Thailand
Viet Nam
Brunei
Darussalam
joined
the
Association on 8 January 1984. Viet
Nam became the seventh member of
ASEAN on 28 July 1995. Lao PDR
and Myanmar were admitted into
ASEAN on 23 July 1997, and
Cambodia on 30 April 1999.
ASEAN Community
ASEAN
PoliticalSecurity
Community
(APSC)
ASEAN
Economic
Community
(AEC)
Narrowing the Development Gap
Initiative for ASEAN Integration
ASEAN
SocioCultural
Community
(ASCC)
PoliticalSecurity
Community
Second Work
Plan for IAI
ASEAN
Community
2015
Economic
Community
Socio-Cultural
Community
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5
ASEAN Community Building 2015
Key
functions (Some key goals of the ASEAN
Community Building):
Safeguarding
animal health and welfare
Improving public health
Food Security and Food safety
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6
ASEAN Views on TADs and Zoonotic
TADs and Zoonotic Disease
Food
Security
Food Safety
Livelihoods
Public Health
Obstacle to Intra-extra ASEAN Trade
Potential impact of climate change
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ASEAN Sectoral Working Group on
Livestock (ASWGL)
ASWGL
• Strengthening National
Capability
• Strengthening regional
coordination
• Supporting animal health
sector
• Enhancing partnership
arrangements and
cooperation
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1. Strengthening Veterinary Services
Bedrock
for national and regional building blocks
OIE Program on Strengthening Veterinary Services
(PSVS) in South East Asia, funded by AusAID
Provision
under ASEAN-OIE MOU
Key areas: veterinary legislation and governance,
emergency preparedness and response, animal health
communication, and quality assurance systems for
laboratories.
ASWGL agreed that regular update of the PSVS be
included in the agenda of future meetings of ASWGL
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2. Strengthening Regional Coordination on
Animal Health
ASEAN Study on Regional Coordination on Animal Health
and Zoonoses
Decision on regional coordination mechanisms (RCM),
transitional arrangement and linkages between RCM and
priority disease strategies (HPAI and SEAFMD)
AAHTF
To finance ASEAN animal health projects (Approved by AMAF
through SOM AMAF)
Priority - Transboundary animal diseases (TADs) crucial to ASEAN,
namely HPAI, FMD and CSF
ARAHIS and WAHIS
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3. Supporting Animal Health Sector Towards
Greater Multi-sectoral Health Cooperation
Joint
Recommendation on Animal-Human Health
Collaboration and Work Plan (endorsed by SOMAMAF and SOMHD)
Rabies - “Call for Action towards the Elimination of
Rabies in the ASEAN Member States and the Plus
Three Countries”
ASEAN Pandemic Preparedness and Response
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4. Enhancing Partnership and Cooperation,
among Partners/Agencies
SPS
Committee under ASEAN Trade in Good
Agreement (ATIGA)
FTAs between ASEAN and Dialogue Partners
MoU with OIE and FAO
AMAF Plus Three Cooperation on Animal Health
EC Regional Cooperation Programme on Highly
Pathogenic and Emerging Diseases (HPED) in Asia
(EC-HPED) – FAO, OIE and WHO components for
ASEAN
ASEAN-ADB HPAI Project and beyond
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ASEAN Objectives on Veterinary
Legislation
Veterinary
legislation and governance should be
seen in the light of developing a rules based ASEAN
Community that expected to improve the capacities
of Veterinary authorities.
ASEAN recognised the need for the Member States
to bestow hard effort to build-up their respective
veterinary services and infrastructure to attain the
international standard setting bodies’ requirement.
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ASEAN Objectives on Veterinary
Legislation
ASEAN
is in full support of the OIE Performance of
Veterinary Services (PVS) pathway
ASEAN-OIE MOU section 2 (1) :OIE shall assist the
ASEAN Member States in“ strengthening veterinary
services by supporting training courses in veterinary
field” signed on the 3rd of June 2008.
32nd AMAF meeting, 24 October 2010, Cambodia,
acknowledged the importance of partnership and
support provided for technical support and capacity
building in veterinary services.
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Conclusion
With
legislative support, veterinary authorities will be
able to foster the development of the sector as well
as to ensure the quality and safety of livestock
products throughout the production and market
chain for achieving robust, healthy, progressive and
secure community.
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One Vision, One Identity, One Community
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THANK YOU VERY MUCH
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