The Program to Eradicate African Swine Fever and to Develop Pig Raising (French: Programme pour l’éradication de la peste porcine africaine et pour le développement de l'élevage porcin, PEPPADEP) was a development project which took place in Haiti in the 1980s.
It was launched in 1981 by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations; the Instituto Interamericano de Ciencias Agrícolas (IICA), a branch of the Organization of American States; the International Development Bank; the governments of Mexico, Canada, the United States; and the government of Haiti to "eliminate the debilitating effects of African swine fever (ASF) in Haiti and to begin development of a productive swine industry".
The Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study (SCWDS) worked in concert with the USDA to identify and eliminate feral swine populations which harbored the ASF virus in Haiti.
Hall and Knox sampled a dead boar known as the "Voodoo Hog" that was killed by a group of Haitiens armed with machetes in a cane field west of Cap-Haitien, and biologist Peter K. Swiderek wrapped up the feral swine disease investigation for SCWDS.
President Jean-Claude Duvalier declared the disease eradicated in the country on April 28, 1982, and the PEPPADEP program was officially closed the following year.