Britain's hopes of obtaining a £600m rebate from the European Union for the
foot and mouth outbreak could be thwarted by a watchdog's damning report.
The report condemns the Government for allowing costs to get out of control.
The National Audit Office last week reported that the full cost of the
outbreak was £8bn and still rising.
As the crisis unfolded, costs spiralled out of control, and one haulage firm
was paid £38m. Fifty nine farmers received compensation payments of more than
£1m.
One farmer received £4m compensation and another was paid £50,000 for a
Swaledale ram that was culled. Other pay-outs included £50,000 for a stag,
£48,000 for a Limousin bull and £20,000 for a pure-bred seven-year-old wild
boar.
The NAO report which is to be followed by an investigation by MPs on the
Public Accounts Committee could be used as evidence by the EU to stop further
payments, said the Tory MEP Robert Sturdy.
Mr Sturdy and a committee of MEPs investigating the outbreak were in Britain
last week with EU officials. "The commission officials are bound to report back.
I would withhold the money until an audit," Mr Sturdy said.
The commission, which has already accepted half of the claim, could resist
further payments until ministers satisfy the EU officials that the money was
justified.
The NAO described how civil servants paid over-generous fees in the panic as
the epidemic spread. It added: "Because of the shortages, the department may
have paid significantly more [than necessary] for the materials required to
eradicate the disease."
EU officials last week also heard evidence that livestock was culled
unnecessarily. The MEPs visited one Welsh hill farm where the entire flock was
destroyed, and compensation was paid, even though tests later proved to be
negative. Mr Sturdy said: "It was also human tragedy. The farmer told us, 'They
have taken away my dreams'."
* Investigations by the Department for Environment, Agriculture and Rural
Affairs will continue this week after tests on a slaughtered pig with suspected
foot and mouth disease proved negative. The animal, discovered at an abattoir in
Congerstone, Leicestershire, was killed this weekend amid fears it was infected
with the disease thought to have been wiped out nine months ago.
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