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Bangladesh culls more bird flu infected chickens
13 May 2007 07:01:06 GMT
Source: Reuters
DHAKA, May 13 (Reuters) - Bangladesh villagers have culled 15,000 more chickens over the last two days at small farms in the north of the country, officials said on Sunday.

The chickens were slaughtered after an outbreak of H5N1 virus was detected at a village near Nilphamari, 400 km (250 miles) northwest of the capital, Dhaka.

With the latest cull, some 157,000 chickens have now been slaughtered and 1.5 million eggs destroyed in 11 districts since the virus was first detected at six farms at Savar near Dhaka on March 22, officials said.

There have been no reported cases of human infection.

Bangladesh has over 125,000 poultry firms producing 250 million broilers and six billion eggs annually.

About four million Bangladeshis are directly or indirectly associated with poultry farming. ((Reporting by Nizam Ahmed, editing by David Fox; Reuters Messaging: nizamuddin.ahmed.reuters.com@reuters.net; +880-2-8619749))
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Thuringia state officials wearing a protective suits search, for dead wild birds along the shore of Stausee in Kelbra July 5, 2007. Germany is raising its assessment of the risk of bird flu after officials in France and Germany discovered more birds which had died of the H5N1 virus, the country's top state veterinary laboratory said on Thursday. She cited the news from Wednesday that more wild birds had tested positive for the lethal strain of H5N1 bird flu in Germany -- this time in the eastern state of Thuringia.



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