INFECTION ZONE SPREADS: Killer Pig Virus NOW AT NATIONWIDE “SERIOUS” ALERT, A Terrifying New Strain Has Landed
The containment has FAILED. A viral killer is sprinting across the country, pushing South Korea into a state of “SERIOUS” crisis. This is African swine fever, a disease that wipes out pig populations—and it has just been confirmed FAR from the border region where it was supposedly contained. A SHOCK PHOTO from authorities shows the grim reality of the escalating threat.
Officials confirmed a case at a pig farm in Yeonggwang County, deep in South Jeolla Province. This comes after another case in South Chungcheong Province in November and four MORE in Gangwon and Gyeonggi this month alone. But the real horror is this: a dangerous NEW STRAIN of the virus, common in Southeast Asia, has been found in the country for the first time. The rules of the game just changed.
They always blamed wild pigs. But the official investigation into these recent cases shows NO WILD PIG INVOLVEMENT. So how did it spread? The silence is deafening. The state’s plan—nationwide disinfections and even inspections of farm workers’ homes—feels like a desperate scramble after the barn door has swung wide open.
They tell you it doesn’t infect humans. But the question they DON’T want you asking is this: who profits from a crippled food supply, and who looked the other way while this nightmare marched south? The entire system’s vulnerability is now on full, terrifying display.
Your dinner plate is now on the front line of a biological war nobody is winning.
Edited for Kayitsi.com




