|
NAIROBI, May 9 (Xinhua) -- The United Nations on
Tuesday called on the international community to step up measures to curb the
spread of the avian flu pandemic.
Addressing the ongoing 114th Session of Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) meeting in Nairobi, UN Senior Coordinator for the Avian and Human Influenza, Dr. David Nabarro, warned that
the virus could mutate into a strain that could spark a human pandemic.
Dr. Nabarro warned that more disastrous scenario
could be possible if no immediate and efficient measures put under way to fight
the spread of H5N1 Bird Flu strain.
"The avian flu has rapidly moved into Africa, the
Middle East, the Indian sub-continent and into Europe during the last four
months. There is potential for influenza virus in birds to perhaps mutate and
become the cause of the next human influenza pandemic," Dr. Nabarro warned.
"This would have enormous consequences in terms of
human suffering and social and economic damage," he told lawmakers from across
the world meeting in Nairobi.
The UN official said the number of countries that had
reported cases of outbreaks of the H5N1 strain had doubled over the past four
months.
"At the beginning of the year only 15 countries had
been affected by the outbreak but by last month the number had moved up to 32,"
he said. "There is need for effective actions by the governments to address this
strain and the need for partnerships between the governments, private sector,
community organizations and the media."
Dr. Nabarro said the disease had caused billions of
dollars worth of economic damage and the virus was likely to mutate into amore
dangerous strain.
The six-day global conference has brought together
about 1,500 delegates, including lawmakers and senior parliamentary staff.
"Parliamentarians should make a point each year of
asking their governments, asking their specialists on what they are doing to
deal with the possibilities of the pandemic, to prepare for the pandemic, to
test preparedness and also to work internationally to ensure the actors are
coping with this threat," he warned.
The H5N1 bird flu virus has led to the deaths of
millions of birds in more than 30 countries.
It has spread to over a dozen new countries in the
past month and infected 175 people since 2003, killing more than 100 of them.
Although it remains an avian disease, and rarely
affects humans, health officials fear it will mutate into a form that can easily
jump from human to human, triggering a pandemic, in which millions of people
might die.
In Africa, the strain has been found in Nigeria,
Egypt, Niger, Cameroon and Burkina Faso, while several countries have stepped up
surveillance measures to fight the disease.
Kenya is among several countries, which have slapped
full or partial imports on imports of poultry, their products and wild birds and
have begun monitoring migratory birds as they arrive.
Kenya, which lies in the migratory path along with
other east African Rift Valley nations, including Ethiopia, Tanzania and Uganda,
are considered at high risk for the spread of the virus as millions of migratory
birds flock there during the European winter. Enditem |