Special report: Global fight against bird
flu
HANOI, May 7 (Xinhua) -- Bird flu, which had not been
present in Vietnam for over one month, hit a duck flock in the country's central
Nghe An province in early May, according to a local veterinary agency on Monday.
Specimens from ducts raised by a local man named
Hoang Seu in Dien Chau district were tested positive to bird flu virus strain
H5, according to the Department of Animal Health under the Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development. Among the flock of 610 ducks, 246 died from
May 1 to 4.
The provincial Veterinary Bureau has culled other
ducks in the flock, disinfected affected areas, and established quarantine
checkpoints around the areas.
Bird flu outbreaks in Vietnam, starting in December
2003, have killed and led to the forced culling of dozens of millions of fowls
in the country, according to the department.
To date, Vietnam has detected over 2,000 bird flu
outbreaks among poultry, leading to the killing or the forced killing of over 40
million fowls, or about 15 percent of its poultry population, according to a
recent report of the World Bank in the country. The direct cost of bird flu in
Vietnam is estimated at 200 million U.S. dollars so far, said the bank.