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BEIJING, Aug. 12 (Xinhuanet) -- The Ministry of Agriculture confirmed a bird flu outbreak occurred at the beginning of August on a chicken farm in the suburbs of Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, but said it has now been brought under
control.
"So far, the bird flu outbreak has been under
control, and no other similar cases has been reported in other parts of the
autonomous region," said a high-ranking official with the ministry.
In the wake of the case, the official said, the local
government instituted rigid measures to stem the spread of the epidemic.
The local government has culled 2,608 chickens,
disinfected and closed the farm, which belongs to the Regional Institute of
Animal Husbandry Science.
Lhasa also spotted a bird flu case in 2004.
The official said the outbreak this year started on
August 1. Atotal of 133 breeding chickens were infected and died. The State Bird
Flu Reference Laboratory later confirmed that these chickens were infected with
the H5N1 bird flu virus.
In compliance with the requirements for preventing
and treating the highly pathogenic H5N1 strain of the avian influenza, the
autonomous region has adopted substantial measures such as emergency inoculation
of all fowls five km away from the venue of the suspected outbreak, tightening
the monitoring of all breeding farms in Lhasa, and launching a daily epidemic
reporting mechanism.
Up to now, vaccines for water fowl have been
distributed to allareas across Tibet except Ngari Prefecture.
The official said that right after the outbreak of
the case, the ministry reported the case to international organizations likethe
United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, the World Organization for
Animal Health as well as authorities in China's Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan
districts.
After receiving the report from the ministry, Hong
Kong's department for Health, Welfare and Food stopped dealing with applications
from Tibet to sell poultry. The department said it would closely monitor the
development of the case in the next few weeks.
From January 27 to March 16, 2004, China reported 49
confirmed bird flu cases in 16 provinces, municipalities or autonomous regions
of the country. With measures taken by Chinese governmentsat all levels, the
deadly virus was curbed in over one month. In 2005, northwest China's Qinghai
province and Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region had reported three cases in May
and June. Enditem |