A wall of hay bales about three metres tall has been constructed at a British Columbia farm where the Canadian Food Inspection Agency is organizing the cull and disposal of about 400 ostriches after an outbreak of avian flu in the herd.

    Several tractor-trailers loaded high with hay rolled onto Universal Ostrich farms on Tuesday, not long after the arrests of two key people in the movement to stop the animals from being killed.

    Ostriches could be seen grazing beyond the wall, where four people wearing head-to-toe white protective suits were visible from the highway near the farm.

    Officials have not confirmed why the wall was installed or when the cull will happen.

    RCMP earlier moved into the farm’s ostrich enclosure, where farm spokeswoman Katie Pasitney and her mother, Karen Espersen, stayed overnight amid the birds.

    The two women were seen being loaded into a police van Tuesday morning.

    Dave Belinski, the other owner of the farm, said he voluntarily left the enclosure before the arrests because he had to remove his truck from inside the pen.

    Belinski, who still had blood crusted on his ears from receiving what he referred to as “love bites” from the ostriches earlier that day, said the women knew they would be arrested but had wanted it to happen close to where the crowd had gathered.

    The inspection agency moved into the farm near Edgewood in southeastern B.C. on Monday with a police escort to prepare for the cull on the property where avian flu was detected last December. Almost 70 of the animals died in the months afterward, and the owners of the farm have fought the agency in Federal Court and over social media to try to keep the ostriches from being destroyed.

    Pasitney, whose social media posts and videos have drawn worldwide attention to the ordered cull, had asked police on Tuesday if they would allow the farmers to feed the birds “humanely” and keep them calm without risking arrest. To that, an officer said it wasn’t his call.

    Belinski said that about 30 minutes before the arrests, Pasitney told him they were being allowed to feed the animals.

    “So, they were going out feeding, and they got arrested in the back corner where nobody is,” he said.

    He said trust had been broken following the arrests, but added that until he talked to Pasitney and Espersen, he wouldn’t know the “whole story.”

    RCMP Staff Sgt. Kris Clark said the two were arrested under the Health of Animals Act. He said they were taken to the RCMP command post to be processed before they would be released.

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