Tomorrow, an event is taking place in Viljandi County, at Nurme Farm, that would require international attention.
This is not a normal administrative procedure – it is an act of violence against one’s own people.
Let’s start from the beginning.
Historically, any “plague” has been a bacterial infection.
However, in the public information space, Olev Kalda, head of department at the Veterinary and Food Board, announced that it was a virus.
These two things don’t add up.
A legitimate question arises: what samples were actually taken and what was checked based on them?
All signs point to the possibility that if it is indeed a bacterial infection, the carriers of the infection may not be pigs, but rather employees of the agencies themselves.
It also cannot be ruled out that the laboratory where the analysis was performed is biologically contaminated – which means that the entire evidence base is questionable.
Another question: why aren’t animals expected to die when it is claimed that this is a serious disease?
If the situation were truly critical, a delay of a few days or weeks would not change anything – dead animals, then emptying the farm and disinfecting the premises would be a logical and scientifically justified course of action.
At the moment, it seems that the goal is instead immediate destruction, regardless of the actual risks.
And most disturbingly – why are K-commandos being sent in with water cannons?
Does a peaceful demonstration in defense of a farmer pose a threat to national security?
Is it really necessary to silence our own people by force, as if they were the enemy, not citizens?
What happens tomorrow is not just a matter of one farm and one farmer.
This is a litmus test that shows how the Estonian state treats its rural residents, its food producers, and its people.
If we remain silent now, we will give tacit approval to official discretion, the use of force, and possible manipulation of evidence.
This story needs international attention.
Because if it can happen in Estonia, it can happen anywhere.























