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NANNING, Feb. 12 (Xinhua) -- A small town in south
China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, which reported the Chinese mainland's
first case of the H5N1 strain of bird flu, was thrown open to the international
media Thursday.
It was the first time Dingdang
Town, in Long'an County, had been opened to foreign journalists since the
outbreak of avian influenza was reported on Jan. 27.
The media group, organized by the Information Office
of the State Council, comprised 14 reporters from 10 organizations, including
the Xinhua New Agency, Associated Press, Reuters, Kyodo from Japan, the Straits
Times from Singapore and Phoenix TV from Hong Kong.
On Jan. 27, the Ministry of Agriculture declared the
deaths of ducks in a village in Dingdang resulted from the H5N1 virus.
As the infected village still in quarantine,
journalists were required to put on protective suits, masks, gloves and boots
during the visit.
Going through a checkpoint, the reporters then walked
a 100-meter country road, about 3 meters wide, leading to the duck farm where
the contagious disease was reported. The road is covered with heavy lime for
disinfection.
The village had just 10 households and the road was
its only link with the outside, said Gan Qiangzhong, deputy head of
Long'anCounty.
Admission to the village was only given to slaughter
and infection-control workers, said Gan, adding that daily necessitieswere
supplied by those working to contain the disease.
Huang Shengde, the 32-year-old owner of the farm, has
been confined to the village since the outbreak, which claimed his flock of
1,800 ducks.
Huang, the only duck breeder in the village, had been
compensated by the government for the slaughter, but he refused toreveal the
exact amount.
Duck-raising is the major source of income for
Huang's family and he had profited from the business for three years.
He said that he would continue raising ducks after
the disease abated, while vowing to pay more attention to epidemic protection.
"Everyday I should report my body temperature," he
said. "Doctors say I am healthy."
Huang's wife, together with their two children, had
gone to her parents' family before the outbreak.
"I have not seen my wife and children for more than
20 days," he said.
"Bird flu is a misfortune, but the adoption of
effective measures and timely controls has contained the disease and nobody has
been infected," said Gan, deputy head of the county.
Guangxi has already mobilized more than 16,000 health
workers to help with vaccination and monitoring, and has intensified prevention
measures, especially in areas bordering Vietnam.
About 14,000 birds within a radius of 3 km of the
duck farm hadbeen slaughtered after the outbreak and 199,000 more were killed
after the region reported a suspected bird flu case in Nanning on Feb. 7.
All poultry markets had been shut down by local
authorities within a radius of 10 km of the infected area in Guangxi. Enditem
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