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Russia sacks agriculture official for handling of Siberian cattle illness

By Thomson Reuters Apr 20, 2026 | 3:45 AM

MOSCOW, April 20 – The governor of Russia’s Novosibirsk region sacked a local agriculture ​minister on Monday for ‌his handling of an outbreak of cattle illness that has led to mass culling in Siberia and sparked ‌rare ​protests by farmers.

Governor ⁠Andrei Travnikov sacked ⁠Minister Andrei Shindelov, the local government’s Telegram channel said.

Novosibirsk farmers protested in March after police ​and vets culled thousands of animals in the region, ⁠fighting what they ⁠described as outbreaks of ​pasteurellosis – a severe bacterial pneumonia – ​and rabies. Many biology experts have ‌said that neither of these diseases is commensurate with the culling.

The U.S. Department of ⁠Agriculture’s Foreign Agriculture Service in a report published last month cited “local sources and ⁠trading ‌contacts” who alleged that “the ⁠scale of these measures ​may ‌indicate an unconfirmed outbreak ​of foot-and-mouth ⁠disease.”

The Russian agriculture watchdog agency told Reuters that allegations in the USDA report “were not true.”

(Reporting by Gleb Bryanski; editing by ​Guy Faulconbridge)