
AFP Photo
A Thai
doctor(R) checks the health of the
son of the first victim of the bird
flu virus in Kanchanaburi province,
western Thailand. Thailand said a
boy had been infected with the
virus, which killed his father.
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have put under increased surveillance as part of a huge
operation to take samples from wild birds.
The French agency for food safety AFSSA recommended increased
scrutiny of wildlife, but stopped short of proposing poultry be
confined.
The United Nations' bird flu envoy flew into China Friday where
more than 91,000 birds have been destroyed to stamp out a new
outbreak.
"The international community needs to cooperate fully to protect
the health of the world's people," Chinese Health Minister Gao
Qiang told UN envoy David Nabarro.
In Thailand, doctors reported the seven-year-old son of a Thai
farmer who died of bird flu had also contracted the disease, but
they said the virus had not mutated and still cannot pass easily
among humans.
The farmer -- the 61st human victim of the virus worldwide since
late 2003 -- died after slaughtering and eating a sick chicken.
"In this case the boy may have contracted the disease from the
area where the chicken was dying. The boy had close contact with
the virus (from being around sick chickens) and possibly from
handling the birds' excrement," Siriraj Hospital director Prasit
Watanapa said.
In Romania, officials said a suspected new case of bird flu had
been detected in the northeast only hours after assurances that
the outbreak of the deadly H5N1 virus had been contained to two
southeastern locations.
The World Health Organization (WTO) warned against
"scaremongering" but it also said each additional human case was
making it easier to develop human-to-human transmission of the
disease.
The Czech agriculture ministry banned sales of chickens in
markets and exhibitions or sale of other birds in public places. |
The government of the principality of Liechstenstein has banned
rearing free range poultry for the next few months following a
lead by neighbors Austria, Germany and Switzerland.
Migratory birds believed to be carriers may next take the virus
to Africa, the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)
said, warning that the continent would be an "ideal breeding
ground" because of close contact between people and animals.
Scientists have said Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda were
particularly threatened as they host millions of migratory fowl
flying to warmer climes during the European winter.
Senegal -- with west Africa's largest bird sanctuaries -- asked
people to take any poultry found dead to the nearest vet for
inspection.
The Canadian government sought to reassure Australia, which
imported racing pigeons from Canada carrying flu antibodies and
subsequently banned Canadian bird imports.
Australia has drawn up a bird flu battle plan including the
possibility of holding airline passengers in quarantine in
aircraft hangars for six days, a report said Saturday.
Passengers arriving in Australia would be subjected to thermal
screening for fever and those on an aircraft found to be
carrying someone suspected of having bird flu could be held at
the airport quarantine centers, the Sydney Morning Herald
reported.
The government plan would be put into operation if bird flu
mutated into a human-to-human virus and posed the risk of a
pandemic.
The Asian Development Bank said it would spend 58 million
dollars on two projects to help combat avian flu. |
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A parrot imported from Latin America
has become the first bird to die of avian flu in Britain,
bringing the danger of the deadly virus much further west across
the European Union as the global battle against the disease
continues.
Meanwhile yet another avian flu outbreak was reported in Russia,
this time in the southern Urals region of Chelyabinsk, and among
swans at a Croatian lake.
Officials confirmed cases of the
virus found in the parrot from Surinam, which died in British
quarantine.
The parrot tested positive for the H5 strain of the bird flu
virus. It arrived in Britain from South America last month and
had been held with a consignment of birds from Taiwan, Britain's
agriculture ministry said.
The chief veterinary officer declined to speculate whether it
had the lethal H5N1 strain, which has spread to Romania and
Turkey.
In Moscow, the emergencies ministry said 31 birds in Sunaly
village in the Chelyabinsk region had died, and in another six
cases the diagnosis had been confirmed.
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A Russian agriculture ministry official said Friday the risk of
the lethal strain occurring in Moscow or surrounding area was
minimal, despite an outbreak in Tula, 300 kilometres (190 miles)
south of Moscow.
Russian veterinary services said Friday they suspected that the
bird flu virus had now spread to 24 areas, including 20 in the
Novosibirsk region of Siberia, three in the Kurgan region one in
the southern region of Stavropol.
The Tula village of Yandovka, where the lethal H5N1 strain of
the virus which has killed 61 people in southeast Asia since
2003 was found, has been quarantined for three weeks with all
poultry there being killed and burned.
Meanwhile neighboring Ukraine slapped a six-month ban on poultry
imports.
Croatia said further tests were needed to determine if the virus
detected in the dead swans was the H5N1 strain, feared to be the
precursor of a human pandemic, or more widespread form of
epidemic, that could kill millions.
The six swans were found in the lake at Zdenci in eastern
Croatia, one of 20 sites Croatian veterinary services
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