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Staff members of the Food and Health Bureau of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) government dispose of the slaughtered chickens in Hong Kong, south China, on Dec. 9, 2008. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
HONG KONG, Dec. 9 (Xinhua) -- Dead chicken found at a
Hong Kong farm have tested positive for the H5 strain of the avian influenza
virus, which were the first confirmed bird flu cases on a local farm in about
six years, health authority said Tuesday.
"Three dead chicken found at a chicken farm at Yuen
Long district were H5 positive after our laboratory tests," York Chow, Secretary
for Food and Health of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR)
government, told a press conference.
The alert level for bird flu has been raised to level
"serious", he added.
Chow said two chicken farms in the areas have been
closed down following the H5 cases and the HKSAR government has declared the
areas within 3 kilometers of the affected farm an infected place and ordered the
culling of about 80,000 chickens on the two chicken farms as well as on live
poultry markets in the affected areas.
Health authority has decided to suspend the imports
of live poultry to the city and the trading of live poultry on local markets for
21 days starting Tuesday.
"Those staff in close contact with live poultry in
the farms are in good health now without any syndromes of H5 infection," Chow
said, "but we will closely monitor the situation."
The Food and Health Bureau had put all local
hospitals on high alert and require them to report timely the possible suspected
human cases of bird flu infection.
"I also call on the public to observe personal
hygiene," he added.
The Leisure and Cultural Services also announced on
Tuesday the temporary closure of the Aviary Pagoda, or a bird watching site, in
Yuen Long Park, which is within 3 km of the affected chicken farm as a
precautionary measure.
Health staff have also been dispatched to clean
certain local markets.
Chow said the local health authority has yet to make
further tests to decide whether there has been any mutation in the strain of the
bird flu virus involved.
The deadly H5N1 strain of the bird flu virus has
killed many people worldwide over the past decade, in addition to leading to the
culling of millions of domestic birds. Scientists worry that a mutation in the
virus could enable its transmission from human to human, thereby leading to
pandemic that could potentially kill millions.
Hong Kong has recently seen cold and dry weather
conditions, in which the bird flu virus is typically more active, an
epidemiologist at the University of Hong Kong said, adding that the risks of the
bird flu cases spreading to retail markets were low.
Hong Kong has been on high alert against a potential
bird flu outbreak in the past years, with precautionary measures and an alert
system that responds quickly.
It has been trying to retrieve some of the live
chicken trading licenses over the past months and centralize the processing of
live chicken before they hit the market.