Excess of the population in Hungary near the Austrian border: in a night and prince campaign, hundreds of dead pigs and cattle must be buried next to the street. Angled Burgers stopped the truck drain. At the same time, a new case shakes the mouth and the claw disease the farmers.
In the night of Good Friday, the first trucks rolled in the Hungarian Pereszegeg, only two kilometers of Deutschkreutz in Burgenland. The transport did not go unnoticed for long.
Secret action in the dark
“The heavy vehicles were loaded with countless carcasses of animals. The dead pigs and cattle had to be buried somewhere in the green,” said furious residents.
Citizens marched up
Within a very short time, more and more inhabitants from Pereszteg took to the streets in the dark. The police were quickly on the spot and blocked the truck fleet.
“If we hadn’t been there right away, the transporters would have bury the carcasses in peace,” reports a professional. He is employed by a company in the Oberpullendorf district. “Today I can’t come and work, I demonstrate. We don’t tolerate the factory grave that easy,” says the angry Hungarian.
No end of the demo
The protests continued on Friday morning. As can be heard, 95 trucks, loaded with dead hooves, must be transported to Pereszeg. It is said that it is the remains of 2000 pigs and 600 cattle. “There are a total of 6,000 carcasses that have to be buried here,” says demonstrators.
Authorities not informed
Discope also spread on this side of the border. “A cheek that has been simply implemented such an action without consulting our authorities,” the former mayor of Deutschkeutz, Manfred Kölly: “Politics must be cheerful!”
All the next case
In the meantime, a new case of mouth and mouth disease in Hungary is causing excitement. The news comes from Rábapordány in the limited zone of the Győr-Moson-Soprone commentary and is therefore more south than the previous MKS outbreaks. 874 animals were reported. “Austria is not influenced by a protection or surveillance zone,” says it.
Source: Krone

I am Wallace Jones, an experienced journalist. I specialize in writing for the world section of Today Times Live. With over a decade of experience, I have developed an eye for detail when it comes to reporting on local and global stories. My passion lies in uncovering the truth through my investigative skills and creating thought-provoking content that resonates with readers worldwide.