Credit Google Maps
Belgium has detected an outbreak of bird flu, leading authorities to order all poultry farmers and individual bird owners to keep the animals confined, the country's food safety agency AFSCA said Saturday. Avian influenza has recently spread to western Europe after outbreaks in Russia and Kazakhstan this summer.
"Three wild birds that stayed in a bird sanctuary in Ostend tested positive for the H5N8 virus," AFSCA said in a statement on Saturday, adding that the outbreak was confirmed the day before by the Sciensano public health institute. AFSCA said the new measures would be effective from Sunday and would apply to private poultry houses as well as individuals who keep birds in their homes, in a country where there is a strong tradition of pigeon racing.
Bird flu panic! A second outbreak of avian influenza in Japan; 50,000 birds culled: The virus is believed to be a highly pathogenic strain which comes after huge bird flu outbreak across Europe: Russia, UK, Holland and Germany rush to contain Avian Flu
"All gatherings of poultry and birds are strictly prohibited," the statement said, adding that preventive measures were imposed on professional pigeon farms on November 1. France this month ordered measures for poultry farms such as protective netting to prevent contact with wild birds that spread the disease, after the country's ministry of agriculture warned that bird flu infections were on the rise in western Europe. In addition to cases declared in the Netherlands, the ministry pointed to "13 cases in wild birds in Germany" and an outbreak on November 3 in the northwest of England.
"What fresh hell is this?" It's a disease which wiped out nearly 50% of the global pig population in 2019 and is still killing millions of pigs in 2020: An infectious disease expert says it's shocking to hear about Canada's first human case of a rare swine flu variant
In Holland, Belgiums neighbours, authorities found bird flu outbreaks at two poultry farms and the same strain - H5N8 - has also infected chickens and wild birds in north Germany. A farm in the eastern Dutch town of Puiflijk (11 out of 10 if you can pronounce that👅) and another nearby have been told to cull 200,000 chickens.
Almost 20 million minks are to be culled in Denmark after a mutated version of the coronavirus is spreading to humans: The mutated virus in minks can have devastating consequences worldwide. 207 farms were now infected, up from 41 last month
Chickens are also infected at a small poultry farm in Nordfriesland, part of Germany's Schleswig-Holstein state. Health experts say people should avoid touching sick or dead birds, and chicken and eggs are safe to eat if cooked thoroughly, as that kills the virus. A poultry farm in Frodsham, north-west England, also has cases: a cull of 13,000 birds was ordered there on Monday.
A smaller cull is underway at a farm in Kent, in the south-east, where the H5N2 avian influenza strain was detected this week. H5N8 has been detected in migratory birds from Russia. A huge cull was carried out on farms in Russia's western Kostroma region late last month, to contain an outbreak. The Dutch farms affected are just outside Nijmegen, 30km (19 miles) from the German border.
No virus has been proven to exist. Look elsewhere for the culprit, like 5G or some other from of EM pollution.
ReplyDelete