1 Medium-, Heavy-Duty Trucks To Face 25% Tariff As Of Nov. 1, Trump Says 2 Shots Fired At Surrey Indian Restaurant Ustaad G76 Early Monday 3 3 Suspected Of Surrey Extortion-Related Shootings Arrested, Charged 4 Man Airlifted To Hospital After Grizzly Attack In British Columbia's East Kootenay Region 5 Metro Vancouver Votes To Scale Down Sewage Treatment Project From $10B To $6B 6 Liberal Government To Deliver All Future Budgets In The Fall As Part Of New Framework 7 'No More Losing,' Poilievre Tells Carney In Scathing Letter Ahead Of Pm's Face-To-Face With Trump 8 Cfia Confirms Death Of Ostrich With 'Pre-Existing Condition' At British Columbia Farm 9 ਕੇਨੇਡਾ ਦੇ ਹੁਣ ਤੇ ਪਹਿਲਾਂ ਦੇ ਹਾਲਾਤ | Vichar Charcha 1 Medium-, Heavy-Duty Trucks To Face 25% Tariff As Of Nov. 1, Trump Says 2 Shots Fired At Surrey Indian Restaurant Ustaad G76 Early Monday 3 3 Suspected Of Surrey Extortion-Related Shootings Arrested, Charged 4 Man Airlifted To Hospital After Grizzly Attack In British Columbia's East Kootenay Region 5 Metro Vancouver Votes To Scale Down Sewage Treatment Project From $10B To $6B 6 Liberal Government To Deliver All Future Budgets In The Fall As Part Of New Framework 7 'No More Losing,' Poilievre Tells Carney In Scathing Letter Ahead Of Pm's Face-To-Face With Trump 8 Cfia Confirms Death Of Ostrich With 'Pre-Existing Condition' At British Columbia Farm 9 ਕੇਨੇਡਾ ਦੇ ਹੁਣ ਤੇ ਪਹਿਲਾਂ ਦੇ ਹਾਲਾਤ | Vichar Charcha

Cfia Confirms Death Of Ostrich With 'Pre-Existing Condition' At British Columbia Farm

Swift News

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency says an ostrich that was part of a B.C. flock that was recently issued a last-minute stay of a cull order by the Supreme Court of Canada has died. 

The agency says the bird at Universal Ostrich Farms in Edgewood, B.C., had a previous injury and a pre-existing condition that impacted its left leg and mobility, and was being treated by the owners for some time. 

It says the bird's health "significantly declined" over a two-day period before dying Saturday. 

Farm spokesperson Katie Pasitney posted a video to Facebook also confirming the news of the death before she accused the CFIA of animal cruelty, saying they had been "dumping the electrolytes out."

The CFIA did not immediately respond to requests to address those claims, but said in a release that it had been "administering medication and electrolyte fluids consistent with the therapy regime provided by the owners." 

The cull was ordered after an outbreak of avian flu at the farm, but the farm's owners challenged the move saying the birds that survived are healthy and scientifically valuable.

It was given a temporary reprieve after the Supreme Court of Canada issued a last-minute stay of the cull last month. 

The CFIA has said it will comply with the stay and file a response with the High Court, while it maintains control of the ostrich enclosure at the farm outside the small southeastern B.C. community.