The Mossos and the Civil Guard search IRTA and a laboratory in Madrid for the African swine fever outbreak
The police had already searched the center located at the UAB in December, even though scientific reports rule out it being the origin of the crisis
BarcelonaAgents of the Mossos d’Esquadra and the Civil Guard on Tuesday again searched the facilities of IRTA-CReSA as part of the investigation into the origin of the African Swine Fever (ASF) outbreak, as reported by El País and confirmed by police sources to ARA. According to a statement released this Wednesday afternoon by the center itself, "new judicial proceedings" ordered by the court handling the case, number 2 of the Cerdanyola del Vallès Court of First Instance, have been carried out to try to clarify the origin of the ASF outbreak in Catalonia. The search at IRTA lasted more than ten hours.
"From the outset, IRTA has maintained an attitude of maximum transparency and full cooperation with the authorities. This cooperation will be maintained throughout the process, responding to any new requests that the judicial authority may make," the center defended.
As part of the same investigation, this Tuesday the Mossos and the Civil Guard also searched the Severo Ochoa Molecular Biology Center in Madrid, a joint center between the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) and the Autonomous University of Madrid (UAM). According to police sources, in both cases the objective was to collect samples-
The first search was on December 18 and the agents took documentation and samples of the viruses with which the researchers work. At that time, the objective was to collect documentation for the investigation that seeks to clarify the origin of the focus. The case has been declared secret.
Three investigations
Beyond the police investigation, on December 30, the parallel study commissioned by the Generalitat ruled out that the ASF outbreak originated from the IRTA facilities and the researchers concluded that it was a strain that "had never been found before". Also in February, the initial report from the State — the official procedure — also ruled out that the outbreak originated from a leak at IRTA nor that there was sabotage behind it.
Furthermore, as the IRTA recalls, the Government also commissioned an external audit of the biosecurity protocols and the center's operation, which reviewed the biosafety containment systems, access controls, sample traceability, biological waste management, and work procedures, and no incidents were detected that pointed to a possible virus escape from the center.