Britain said today it would ease restrictions on livestock movements and is likely to stand down vaccination teams after initial tests for foot-and-mouth disease at a farm and a theme park proved negative.
Authorities sealed off a farm in Kent, southern England, and Chessington World of Adventures & Zoo, a theme park in nearby Surrey, on Tuesday because of suspicions of foot and mouth.
But Britain's chief veterinary officer Dr Debby Reynolds said preliminary tests had found no foot and mouth at either site.
The latest report on the outbreak concludes the risk of the disease spreading outside the infected area in Surrey is now "very low", Dr Reynolds said.
The highly infectious virus was found this month on two farms in Surrey, forcing more than 570 animals to be destroyed and prompting the European Union and other countries to ban British meat and dairy exports. Farmers say the trade bans cost them £1.8 million pounds a day.
Chessington World of Adventures said it had called in a vet to examine one of its sheep following a daily health check.
A national ban on animal movements has been in place since the outbreak was confirmed on Aug. 3, although it was later eased to permit the movement of animals to slaughter, to milking or for emergency treatment.
Restrictions on livestock movement will be further eased from midnight to permit farmers to move their animals between different fields on their farm for welfare reasons, the agriculture ministry said.
"Provided ... there is no change in the disease situation, the chief veterinary officer will stand down vaccination teams from their current level of alert," a ministry statement said.
The government had teams ready to vaccinate animals at farms around the infected area if the outbreak had got out of hand.
From August 23rd - barring new cases of disease - animals may be sent from collection centres, used by small farmers, to abattoirs, the ministry said.
The National Farmers' Union (NFU) said that if there were no further outbreaks of foot and mouth, the EU export ban could be eased as early as August 26. All remaining restrictions on livestock movement could be lifted on September 10 and Britain could win back its foot and mouth-free status in early November.
Farmers have generally praised the government for responding quickly to the latest outbreak, in contrast with a devastating 2001 outbreak when more than six million farm animals were killed, costing the economy some £8.5 billion.
The government has said the likely source of the infection was the Pirbright research centre, close to the farm where cattle were first infected.
The site houses two foot and mouth laboratories - one public and one, Merial, owned by US firm Merck and French firm Sanofi-Aventis SA.