Special report: Global fight against bird flu
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A boy is looking to a chicken stall in Dacca, captital of Bangladesh.(Xinhua/Reuters File Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
DHAKA, Feb. 24 (Xinhua) -- Bangladesh's health workers culled more than 58,000 fowls across the country in the past 24 hours as bird flu ravaged the country's poultry industry, officials said Sunday.
The new culling was conducted in districts of
Jamalpur, Rajshahi, Gazipur, Bogra, Tjhakurgaon, Feni and Chandpur.
An official at the bird flu control room told Xinhua
that with the fresh culling of chickens, ducks, pigeons and pet birds, the total
number of culled birds shot up to 968,731 since the avian influenza broke out in
March last year.
A similar number of eggs were destroyed at 315 farms
in 92 sub-districts under 45 districts, the official said.
Bangladesh Poultry Industries Association (BPIA) has
said the deadly virus has led to the closure of more than 50 percent of the
farms and turned nearly five million people jobless.
The BPIA said about 100 billion taka (about 1.43
billion U.S. dollars) were invested in the poultry sector but the flu has
incurred a loss of 41 billion taka (about 586 million U.S. dollars) to the
industry so far.
"The losses we have faced are irreparable. Nearly
five million men and women mostly in rural areas engaged in poultry business
were turned jobless", BPLA president Kaiser Rahman said.
He said 50 percent of the poultry farms were already
shut down and more on the verge of the closure.
The BPIA demanded immediate import of vaccine to
combat the virus and to protect chickens.
It also demanded granting bank loans on easy term for
affected traders and owners of the feed mills, exemption of VAT and taxes on
poultry fodder, equipment and other materials required for the industry, and
allowing breeders and big farm owners to import kits for quick detection of the
virus.
Meanwhile, prices of chickens and eggs at markets
dropped drastically as panicked people stopped eating chickens and eggs.
However, microbiologists and physicians said there is
no reason for the people to panic as there is no human infection case in
Bangladesh.
They stressed the need for raising awareness about
the disease among the people, including the poultry workers, sellers, buyers and
veterinarians, to contain the infection and spread of the
disease.