[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 9, Volume 1]
[Revised as of January 1, 2001]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 9CFR94.1]

[Page 437-439]
 
                  TITLE 9--ANIMALS AND ANIMAL PRODUCTS
 
  CHAPTER I--ANIMAL AND PLANT HEALTH INSPECTION SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF 
                               AGRICULTURE
 
    PART 94--RINDERPEST, FOOT-AND-MOUTH DISEASE, FOWL PEST (FOWL PLAGUE), EXOTIC NEWCASTLE DISEASE, AFRICAN SWINE FEVER, HOG CHOLERA, AND BOVINE SPONGIFORM ENCEPHALOPATHY: PROHIBITED AND RESTRICTED IMPORTATIONS--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 94.1  Regions where rinderpest or foot-and-mouth disease exists; importations prohibited.

    (a) Notice is hereby given that, in accordance with section 306 of 
the Act of June 17, 1930, as amended (19 U.S.C. 1306), it has been 
determined, and official notice has been given to the Secretary of the 
Treasury that:
    (1) Except as provided in Sec. 94.21, rinderpest or foot-and-mouth 
disease exists in all regions of the world, except those listed in 
paragraph (a)(2) or (a)(3) of this section;
    (2) The following regions are declared to be free of both rinderpest 
and foot-and-mouth disease: Australia, Austria, The Bahamas, Barbados, 
Belgium, Bermuda, British Honduras (Belize), Canada, Channel Islands, 
Chile, Costa Rica, Czech Republic, Denmark, Dominican Republic, El 
Salvador, Fiji, Finland, France, Germany, Great Britain (England, 
Scotland, Wales, and Isle of Man), Greenland, Guatemala, Haiti, 
Honduras, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Jamaica, Luxembourg, Mexico, 
The Netherlands, New Caledonia, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Northern 
Ireland, Norway, Panama, Papua New Guinea, Poland, Portugal, Republic of 
South Africa except the province of KwaZulu-Natal and the foot-and-mouth 
disease controlled area (which extends from the Republic of South 
Africa's border with Mozambique approximately 30 to 90 kilometers into 
the Republic of South Africa to include Kruger National Park and 
surveillance and control zones around the park, and elsewhere extends, 
from east to west, approximately 10 to 20 kilometers into the Republic 
of South Africa along its borders with Mozambique, Swaziland, Zimbabwe, 
Botswana, and the southeast part of the border with Namibia), Spain, 
Territory of St. Pierre and

[[Page 438]]

Miquelon, Sweden, Switzerland, Trinidad and Tobago, Trust Territory of 
the Pacific Islands, and Uruguay except the department of Artigas.
    (3) The following regions are declared to be free of rinderpest: 
Greece and the Republic of South Africa.
    (b) The importation of any ruminant or swine or any fresh (chilled 
or frozen) meat of any ruminant or swine \1\ that originates in any 
region where rinderpest or foot-and-mouth disease exists, as designated 
in paragraph (a) of this section, or that enters a port in or otherwise 
transits a region in which rinderpest or foot-and-mouth disease exists, 
is prohibited: (1) Except as provided in part 93 of this chapter for 
wild ruminants and wild swine; (2) except as provided in paragraph (c) 
of this section for meat of ruminants or swine that originates in 
regions free of rinderpest and foot-and-mouth disease but that enters a 
port or otherwise transits a region where rinderpest or foot-and-mouth 
disease exists; and (3) except as provided in Sec. 94.4 of this part for 
cooked or cured meat from regions where rinderpest or foot-and-mouth 
disease exists.
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    \1\ Importation of animals and meat includes bringing the animals or 
meat within the territorial limits of the United States on a means of 
conveyance for use as sea stores or for other purposes.
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    (c) Except as otherwise provided in this part, fresh (chilled or 
frozen) meat of ruminants or swine raised and slaughtered in a region 
free of foot-and-mouth disease and rinderpest, as designated in 
paragraph (a)(2) of this section, which during shipment to the United 
States enters a port or otherwise transits a region where rinderpest or 
foot-and-mouth disease exists may be imported provided that all of the 
following conditions are met:
    (1) The meat is accompanied by the foreign meat inspection 
certificate required by Sec. 327.4 of this title and, upon arrival of 
the meat in the United States, the foreign meat inspection certificate 
is presented to an authorized inspector at the port of arrival;
    (2) The meat is placed in the transporting carrier in a hold, 
compartment, or, if the meat is containerized, in a container that which 
was sealed in the region of origin by an official of such region with 
serially numbered seals approved by APHIS, so as to prevent contact of 
the meat with any other cargo, handling of the meat after the hold, 
compartment, or container is sealed, and the loading of any cargo into 
and the removal of any cargo from the sealed hold, compartment, or 
container en route to the United States;
    (3) If any foreign official breaks a seal applied in the region of 
origin in order to inspect the meat, he or she then reseals the hold, 
compartment, or container with a new serially numbered seal; and, if any 
member of a ship's crew breaks a seal, the serial number of the seal, 
the location of the seal, and the reason for breaking the seal are 
recorded in the ship's log.
    (4) The serial numbers of the seals used to seal the hold, 
compartment, or container are recorded on the foreign meat inspection 
certificate which accompanies the meat;
    (5) Upon arrival of the carrier in the United States port of 
arrival, the seals are found by an APHIS representative to be intact, 
and the representative finds that there is no evidence indicating that 
any seal has been tampered with; Provided that, if the representative 
finds that any seal has been broken or has a different number than is 
recorded on the foreign meat inspection certificate, then the meat may 
remain eligible for entry into the United States only if APHIS personnel 
are available to inspect the hold, compartment, or container, the 
packages of meat, and all accompanying documentation; and the importer 
furnishes additional documentation (either copies of pages from the 
ship's log signed by the officer-in-charge, or certification from a 
foreign government that the original seal was removed and the new seal 
applied by officials of that government) that demonstrates to the 
satisfaction of the Administrator that the meat was not contaminated or 
exposed to contamination during movement from the region of origin to 
the United States; and
    (6) The meat is found by an authorized inspector to be as 
represented on the foreign meat inspection certificate.

(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control number 
0579-0015)

[30 FR 12118, Sept. 23, 1965]

[[Page 439]]


    Editorial Note: For Federal Register citations affecting Sec. 94.1, 
see the List of CFR Sections Affected, which appears in the Finding Aids 
section of the printed volume and on GPO Access.