Three dead cows dumped on a beach in Bulgaria


The animals had no special markings on their ears for cattle bred in EU countries.
Three dead cows have been dumped on the Bulgarian coast in the last two weeks. The European country claims that the animals did not live on EU territory as they were not properly labelled. This was reported by the Bulgarian newspaper Nova.
The cows were reportedly dumped one at a time. All were found in the Burgas region - on the coast near Tsarevo, Chernomorets and Talasakra.
The Bulgarians speculate that the last two cows could have come to them from the flooded Kherson region. In this case, however, the corpses of the cows travelled 600 km.
However, the first corpse cannot be attributed to a disaster in the south of Ukraine," the journalists point out.
As the newspaper notes, the first cow was found on June 6, the day the Russians blew up the Kakhovskaya hydropower plant. This means that the animal corpse cannot be linked to the disaster.
The regional department of veterinary service insists that the cows are "not local". They clarified that all the dead animals had no special ear tags, which are available for cattle raised in the EU.
The Bulgarian authorities do not rule out that the cattle could have been victims of a shipwreck carrying animals by sea. At the same time, it is noted that no distress signals have been received about a sinking ship with cattle.
Officials have assured that the beaches where the bodies were found will be disinfected.
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