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BELGRADE, April 7 (Xinhua) -- Croatia confirmed
Friday night the first bird flu case in the capital of Zagreb after a dead swan
found there tested positive for the H5 strain of bird flu virus.
The dead swan was found on the shores of the Sava River in southeast Zagreb last weekend, said Mladen Pavic,
spokesman for the Croatian Agriculture, Forestry and Water Management Ministry.
Tests confirmed that the dead bird had contracted the
H5 type of bird flu virus, but test findings as to whether it was the lethal
H5N1 strain would be released on Sunday or Monday, reports from Zagreb quoted
him as saying.
Quarantine officers found no other birds after
combing the area within a radius of three km of the locale, Pavic said, adding
that they would continue to monitor the situation there closely.
Croatia, which lies under one of the main flight
paths for migratory birds, reported its first bird flu case last October when
H5N1 was found in six wild swans in the eastern part of the country.
In late February this year, the disease struck the
country's southern coastal region, where two dead swans were tested positive for
H5N1.
Croatian authorities immediately adopted a series of
precautionary measures to curb the spread of the disease, including ordering
farmers to keep their poultry indoors to try to prevent them from contracting
the virus from wild birds.
The authorities also halted poultry product imports
from bird flu-hit nations, including Bulgaria, Greece, Italy and Slovenia.
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