Looking for answers to halt bird flu spread
NST, 31 May 2006

ROME: Three years after the first outbreak of bird flu in Asia, experts are still puzzled at how the disease spread across three continents so quickly and how wild birds have helped disseminate the deadly virus.

More than 300 scientists and animal experts will discuss these and other questions at a two-day conference which opened in Rome yesterday.

The meeting was organized by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, based in Rome, and by the Paris-based World Organization for Animal health. Experts were invited from about 100 countries.

The H5N1 strain of bird flu has killed at least 127 people and ravaged poultry flocks in Asia, Europe and Africa, but experts are still unsure if migrating birds or the commercial poultry trade deserve most of the blame for spreading the disease.

Also, experts wonder why the virus, widespread in Southeast Asia since 2003, only started moving across the continent to Europe and Africa last year, said Samuel Jutzi, director of FAO’s animal production and health division.

“Why all of a sudden that happened is not entirely clear”, Jutzi said. “And if the wild birds had a role in that, why didn’t they have one before?”

So far, most human cases have been traced to contact with infected poultry, but experts fear the deadly virus could mutate into a form that passes easily from human to human, possibly sparking a global pandemic. Understanding how the bird flu virus spreads is a key factor in the fight against the disease.

Evidence on the role of wild birds is not always conclusive in the areas where H5N1 has appeared. Migratory  birds    introduced   the

disease in Russia and Eastern Europe, but in the case of recent outbreaks in Africa no evidence has yet been found pointing to wild birds, Jutzi said.

“Ornithologists are very knowledgeable on the movement of birds but not on their diseases”, he said.

“We hope the conference will indicate some research in this direction”.

Also on the agenda is surveillance of wild birds and poultry, risk assessment and disease management. --- AP.