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| A customs officer shows quail eggs while
checking luggages, at the Nice Airport, in southern France. Europe threw
up protective zones to keep the ever-expanding bird flu from spreading to
humans and devastating the continent's poultry industry, even as
researchers warned a future pandemic could kill 142 million people
worldwide.(Xinhua/AFP) | BRUSSELS, Feb. 17 (Xinhuanet) -- Slovenia's
government on Thursday confirmed its first bird flu case in the north of the
country. Germany also confirmed two dead swans had been affected with the fatal
H5N1 virus. The European Union approved new measures to tighten control of the
spread of the deadly disease.
EU
MEASURES
According to the EU regulations, if H5N1 virus is
suspected or confirmed in any EU country, the authorities must immediately set
up an inner protection zone, surrounded by a surveillance zone andan extra
buffer zone.
The sizes of the protection and surveillance zones
are the samefor both wild birds and domestic poultry -- 3 km for the inner zone
and 10 km for the surveillance zone -- while the buffer zone's size depends on
the area's topography.
Within the inner zone, domestic poultry must be
slaughtered if the H5N1 strain is suspected or confirmed. In the surveillance
zone, poultry must be confined unless traveling to a slaughterhouse, officials
said.
The buffer zone is a new measure.
"We are taking the additional precaution of defining
high-risk areas to act as a buffer zone between infected areas and unaffected
parts of a member state," Philip Tod, European Commission food safety spokesman,
told a press briefing in Brussels on Thursday.
"The establishment of these risk areas will help to
define a disease-free part of the country, which is obviously good for trade
purposes," he said.
On Wednesday, the EU agreed to pay half the costs of
national bird flu surveillance programmes, which aim to ensure early detection
of any outbreak of the disease in the EU-25, up to a ceiling of 1.96 million
euros (2.32 million US dollars).
Countries where the highly pathogenic strain has been
detected,or strongly suspected, have in recent weeks set up protection and
surveillance zones as a precaution.
In wild birds, all poultry and captive animals must
be kept indoors in the event of an outbreak, within both the protection and
surveillance zones, with movement within and from the zones restricted. Hunting
of wild birds should be banned.
Brussels earlier this week adopted a global ban on
imports of untreated feathers, and the new measures passed on Thursday are
expected to be put into action in the next few days.
The whole European continent is now in a high state
of nervousness, and every country is rushing to make preparations to prevent the
spread or outbreak of the disease.
"Everybody is on high alert," one EU expert said on
condition of anonymity. "We are working on the assumption that there is a high
risk of infection in many areas of Europe."
BIRD FLU
SPREADS
In Europe, the presence of H5N1 virus has so far been
verified in Austria, Bulgaria, Croatia, Germany, Greece, Italy, Romania,
Slovenia, Ukraine and the European part of Russia. Almost all the cases involve
migratory wild swans.
On Thursday, Slovenia reported its first bird flu
case near theAustrian border. Germany's leading animal health institute also
verified two dead swans found on Tuesday were infected with the deadly virus.
Another new case was also confirmed in Romania, bringing the affected number to
31 in the country.
"Of course we are worried and we have to get used to
the fact that avian flu is now spreading within the European Union," said
Zsuzsanna Jakab, head of the EU's Stockholm-based European Center for Disease
Prevention and Control.
Until now, all the cases in Europe were found on
migratory birds, which means the deadly virus has not, or has not been found,to
affect poultry and people on the European continent, yet the clock is ticking.
EU officials say the real fear now stems from the
expected spring migration from Africa, where Nigeria is having its first bird
flu outbreak in the African continent.
H5N1 influenza remains mainly a disease of poultry,
and has killed or forced the culling of more than 200 million birds acrossAsia,
parts of the Middle East, Europe and Africa.
But it has also infected 169 people, killing 91, and
is steadily mutating. If it acquires the ability to easily pass from person to
person, it could cause a pandemic that would kill millions. กก
POULTRY INDUSTRY
CRISIS
Europe's poultry industry has been hit badly by the
arrival of the virus in the European Union. Poultry farmers in Italy complained
that chicken meat demand has fallen 70 percent since Saturday when bird flu
first hit Europe. They called on the government to abolish tax to help them
survive the crisis.
The Lowy Institute for International Policy, an
independent Australian think tank, predicted that a pandemic could wipe 4.4
trillion US dollars off global economic output and kill more than 140 million
people. Enditem |