MANILA, Jan. 8 (Xinhua) -- A team of international
experts are investigating the Ebola Reston virus found in pigs at two farms in
the northern Philippines, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Thursday.
Experts from the United Nations Food and Agriculture
Organization, the World Organization for Animal Health and the World Health
Organization are now working with their Philippines counterparts "to address,
through field and laboratory investigation, important questions as to the source
of the virus, its transmission, its virulence and its natural habitat, in order
to provide appropriate guidance for animal and human health protection,"
according to a statement released by the Manila-based WHO Western Pacific
Regional Office.
This is the first time that the virus has been found
outside monkeys, and the first time ever, worldwide, that it has been found in
swine, a food-producing animal.
The joint mission will last ten days and testing
results will come out weeks later, said Caroline-Anne Coulombe, a technical
officer of WHO, in a phone interview.
Meanwhile, WHO said that it remains safe to consume
pork meat, as long as it is purchased in accredited outlets and it is handled
and cooked properly.
Meat from suspect pigs, sick pigs or pigs found dead,
should not be eaten nor fed to other animals, and proper hygiene precautions and
protection should be taken to dispose of sick or dead pigs, health experts
warned the public.
Ebola Reston, a sub-type of the Ebola, was first
discovered in 1989 from crab-eating monkeys originating in the Philippines. The
disease is infectious but no serious illness or death in humans have been
reported to date.
The Philippines has issued a ban on pork exports to
other countries after the Ebola Reston virus was identified there in October
last year.