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Authorities worry bird flu will hit major India city
24 Jan 2008 12:24:46 GMT
Source: Reuters
(Adds Indonesia death, animal rights group)

By Bappa Majumdar

KOLKATA, India, Jan 24 (Reuters) - Authorities patrolled poultry markets in Kolkata to try to stop bird flu spreading to one of India's largest cities as fears grew the outbreak of the disease in eastern India was out of control.

Bird flu has spread to nine of West Bengal's 19 districts and there were reports of more bird deaths in another five districts in the state of 80 million people.

"The virus is most likely to spread to other areas within the infected zones and nearby districts, but we are now trying to stop it from hitting Kolkata," said Surjya Kanta Mishra, the state's health minister.

The H5N1 bird flu virus has been confirmed in two districts so far. Authorities have not confirmed H5N1 in other districts but say it is likely to be the same strain.

The World Health Organisation has said it was India's most serious outbreak since the strain was first detected in the country in 2006.

On Thursday, a 30-year-old Indonesian man who had tested positive for bird flu died, and the virus has also resurfaced in Europe.

Indonesia has had the most fatalities from bird flu of any country, with the toll currently at 98 people dead.

Thailand said on Thursday the strain was confirmed in poultry in a northern province, while Bangladesh has been struggling to contain an outbreak that has affected more than two dozen districts. West Bengal borders Bangladesh.

Scientists fear the strain could mutate into a form easily transmitted from person to person, leading to a pandemic that could kill millions around the globe.

"STRICT SURVEILLANCE"

Authorities found avian influenza in dead bird samples from Hooghly district, a little more than an hour's drive from the crowded West Bengal capital, Kolkata.

More than five million people live in Kolkata, a city dotted with rows of large houses, crumbling colonial buildings, glittering glass offices and congested slums.

Hundreds of health officials searched markets in the city's narrow lanes, looking for sick birds smuggled in from infected districts. Health officials were also checking birds at the biggest poultry farm in the state near Kolkata.

"A strict surveillance has been put in place and we are checking every single truck coming into the city," said Anisur Rahaman, the state's animal resources minister. "We are making every effort to save the city from the virus."

West Bengal is ruled by the world's longest-serving democratically elected communist government and it is facing huge criticism from the opposition and the central government for a slow response to the outbreak.

Authorities in the neighbouring state of Bihar said on Wednesday they would cull chickens along its border with West Bengal as a precaution.

Authorities on Wednesday intercepted a truck carrying 10,000 chicks in West Bengal's Birbhum district, the epicentre of the latest outbreak of bird flu in India. The truck was apparently trying to leave the state. Officials buried the chicks alive in a ditch, villagers said.

Animal rights activists slammed the state for burying birds alive, saying that international regulations, ratified by India, made it mandatory for sick animals and birds to be sedated before culling.

"Sick chickens crawled out of their graves when India buried them alive during the first outbreak in Maharashtra in 2006, yet they are doing the same thing again," N.G. Jayasimha of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) said in Kolkata. "This inhuman procedure will never help them contain the virus."

Authorities say it is difficult to contain the outbreak in West Bengal because the virus has affected mostly backyard poultry, reared in the thousands by villagers all over the state.

Villagers are unwilling to part with their flocks and are hiding chickens and ducks inside homes, saying they were the only source of income. Authorities, though, are paying compensation of up to 40 rupees ($1) for each culled bird.

At least 60 percent of India's billion-plus people live in rural areas close to their livestock, raising the risks of the bird flu virus infecting people. (Editing by Alistair Scrutton and Krittivas Mukherjee)
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