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Tuesday, 27 March, 2001, 17:04 GMT 18:04 UK
Death stalks Cumbria's killing fields
![]() The fires burn at a farm in Longtown
BBC Radio Cumbria's Gordon Swindlehurst describes the despair as foot-and-mouth continues to ravage the county.
A lone bell tolls a doleful note into the grey spring sky above Carlisle Cathedral. Hunched figures scuttle through the close as if to beat a curfew. And in the fields smoulder orange pyres, tiger-striped by the black, charred legs of upturned animals. A medieval atmosphere hangs over north Cumbria, the area most affected by the worst foot-and-mouth outbreak in living memory. The epidemic in 1967 still stands fresh in the minds of thousands of farmers across Britain. Yet in these parts even they will concede that this is far worse.
Already, more animals have been slaughtered than the half million culled nationally in the 60s. Smoke billows across the fields of the Debatable Lands, the corner of the country between Hadrian's Wall and the Scottish border. It was here, in Longtown, that the UK's biggest site for sheep sales became the export point for a wasting disease which, while not directly killing beasts, leaves them worthless to the farmers whose livelihoods they provide. In-depth review Yes, there will be compensation for the physical loss of stock - if not for its earning potential or the generations of work which have gone into producing it. Yes, there must be a root-and-branch review of British agriculture and its role as a food provider and landscape manager.
One condemned dairyman told me: "It's spring, we should be bringing life into the world." Instead, the land stands silent. The air should be alive with the bleating of new-born lambs. Forlorn fields Yet the fields are forlorn, forsaken and free of the very thing that gives them their existence - life. Instead, there are fires, a smoking, stench-ridden scourge ... better, though, than the piles of bodies littering the landscape, an eyesore for the motorist and a haven for crows and rats. The disease is rife, as are the rumours surrounding it.
Yet still the farmers accuse. Other fingers point at a plot by animal rights activists, the IRA, Saddam Hussein even. An industry and its dependent communities are keen to find a scapegoat. The witch-hunt adds to the oppressive, dark-age air. Disease and death Bar-room conversation covers little else, even in those pubs which still have more than a fistful of customers. At night, the roads and farmsteads are quiet, the countryside unlit but for the deep orange glow of the pyres, the talk of the town muted as the bell tolls out its monotonous, medieval song for a land in the thrall of disease and death. Meanwhile, Cumbria watches, waits and wonders if the world really is coming to an end.
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