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| As in Asia, many of birds are kept in
free-range backyard farms as sources of income and food in Africa.
(Photo:AFP) |
BEIJING, Feb.10 (Xinhuanet) -- Nigerian authorities
yesterday informed world health officials of an outbreak of bird flu at a large
commercial farm in the northern state of Kaduna, redflaging the world
that the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu has spread to Africa.
Tens of thousands of caged birds died on the site. A
laboratory in Padova, Italy, has confirmed the presence of the H5N1 strain in a
dead bird from the facility.
Nigerian officials have culled thousands of birds, enacted
farm quarantines, and curbed poultry shipping in attempts to check the outbreak.
"The federal government is doing everything to contain the
disease within the three centers that have been located," a
Nigerian official said.
International experts are also in Nigeria to assess
the situation and assist local authorities.
The Nigerian
authorities reported no confirmed cases of human infection at
this point.
Migrating birds or the poultry trade may be to
blame, experts say. Experts, however, aren't certain how the virus reached
Africa.
Bird flu has been spreading steadily westward
from its East Asian source. In recent weeks it has been responsible for human
deaths in Turkey and Iraq.
Preliminary genetic sequencing information
indicates that the strain is of Asian lineage, similar to that which recently
spread into Turkey
Officials were not shocked at the deadly flu's
appearance in Africa. In October the FAO announced that the virus would likely
reach Africa in the near future, citing migrating birds that would soon be
moving from breeding grounds in Asia to their winter habitat in Africa.
Migrating birds are prime suspects in the
African appearance of bird flu, but their role remains uncertain.
"There are other ways diseases move around
the world.It could be that wildlife introduced the virus, but through our own
activities of commerce, the disease spread," said Juan Lubroth, a Rome-based
senior animal health officer with the UN Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO).
(Agencies) |