Update on
the outbreak of more Avian-Flu outbreaks around the world this week
- Different strains of bird flu have been spreading across Europe and Asia since late last year, leading to mass culling of poultry in certain countries and some human deaths in China.
- World Health Organization to call on all countries on Monday to monitor closely outbreaks of the deadly virus in birds and poultry and to report promptly any human cases that could signal the start of a flu pandemic.
This week
reports from Russia claim 600,000 chickens were killed due to avian flu in Astrakhan,
resulting in the loss of hundreds of millions eggs to the region.
France will
scale back preventive slaughtering of ducks to counter bird flu after the
culling of 800,000 birds this month helped slow the spread of the disease in
the southwest, the country's agriculture minister said on Thursday. France
resorted to a mass cull after the highly contagious H5N8 strain of bird flu
started spreading among farms in the southwest, the country's main production
zone for the duck and goose liver speciality foie gras.
The 800,000
birds culled preventively were in addition to about 1 million that died or were
slaughtered at farms where the H5N8 virus was detected, he said.
Bird flu in
East Africa, Burundi is on alert as signs of bird flu were detected in Uganda,
close to the Burundi border, where fishermen reported “mass death of wild
birds” on the shores of Lake Victoria, near Entebbe, which lies near the
capital Kampala.
Greece
reported an outbreak of the highly contagious H5N8 bird flu virus among laying
hens on a farm in the southern part of the country, the World Organisation for
Animal Health (OIE) said on Thursday, citing a report from the Greek farm
ministry. The country had already reported a case of H5N8 in a swan in December
but this would be the first outbreak on a farm.
Some 28,000
hens died of the virus, the report said. The H5N8 Bird flu virus has spread
among European countries in recent months with more than 20 countries hit so far,
according to the OIE.
Bird flu
has been confirmed at a farm in Lincolnshire, England four weeks after it was
found at a nearby unit. A flock of 6,000 turkeys has been diagnosed with the
H5N8 strain of avian flu, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural
Affairs (Defra) said.
Some of the
birds at Low Farm in Fulstow, near Louth, East Lindsey, have died. The rest are
due to be culled.
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