Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Bangladesh: Bird Flu in ANIMALS/POULTRY Feb/6/2008-Feb/28/2008

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #16
    Re: BANGLADESH: Return of the bird flu threat

    20,580 poultry birds culled in Dinajpur

    Star Report


    Livestock department officials of Dinajpur culled at least 20,580 chickens, including free-range chickens, ducks and pigeons, between Wednesday midnight and yesterday noon.

    Our Dinajpur correspondent reports: The birds were infected with H5N1 strain of the avian influenza, according to a report from Savar Livestock Research Institute.

    District livestock officials said several hundred fowls of Mizanur Rahman's farm died of unknown diseases on February 2. They sent a number of the dead fowls to Joypurhat Livestock Research Institute and later to Savar Livestock Research Institute for tests.

    On February 5, reports from Savar Livestock Research Institute said the chickens died of bird flu.

    Sources said 19,903 fowls were culled at Mizanur's farm and other farms of the town after receiving the reports. At least 677 free-range chickens within a square kilometre area have also been culled.

    Meanwhile, Dinajpur livestock officials received Tk 3.37 lakh as fund for compensating owners of 43,978 fowls that were culled since March last year. However, the department had culled at least 64,558 fowls since March last year.

    Foreign Adviser Iftekhar Ahmed Chowdhury yesterday said his ministry was working closely with ministries concerned and foreign partners to assist the government and the poultry industry address the avian flu issue, UNB reports.

    He said this when a delegation of Bangladesh Poultry Industries Association met him and apprised him of various problems the country's booming poultry industry is facing.

    The association's President Mohammad Kaiser Rahman, Technical Adviser to Bangladesh Poultry Industries Association MM Khan, Director of Aftab Bahumukhi Farms Shah Habibul Haque were present at the meeting.

    Comment


    • #17
      Re: BANGLADESH: Return of the bird flu threat

      Commentary

      H5N1 Culling Jump in Bangladesh


      Recombinomics Commentary 18:34
      February 7, 2008

      Authorities in Dhaka, the country?s capital, and Chittagong, its port city, are worried by the wide number of dead crows they found over the past two days. The birds tested positive for the H5N1 strain of bird flu.

      City officials in Bangladesh?s capital have already ordered a ban on the sale of undressed chicken in the city?s markets. In Chittagong, authorities announced the spread of the deadly flu in several farms, as well as in crows that tested positive for the H5N1 strain.

      The above comments describe the continued spread of H5N1 in Bangladesh. The daily Ministry of Fish and Livestock report from Bangladesh shows culling in 202 farms since the outbreak was first reported last year. However, the number in yesterday?s report was 179.

      This dramatic jump represents new culling yesterday in six districts. Leading the list was Norshingdi with 17 farms northeast of Dhaka (see satellite map here and here). The other districts reporting new culling yesterday were Rangur (1), Feni (1), Mouvibazar (2), Barguna (2), Bagerhat (2).

      This dramatic jump, coupled with H5N1 positive crows in Dhaka and Chittagong, are cause for concern.


      .
      "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

      Comment


      • #18
        Re: BANGLADESH: Return of the bird flu threat

        Saturday, February 09, 2008

        1200 fowls die of bird flu at gheor farm

        Our Correspondent

        MANIKGANJ, Feb 8: Twelve hundred poultry birds died in the last four days at Aleya poultry farm at Foyla village under Ghior Upazila in the district.

        The victims sent the sample of the dead birds to the Field Diseases Investigation Laboratory at Manikganj for examine recently.

        Principal Scientific Officer of the Laboratory Dr Hossain Ali said the birds were examined there and confirmed of bird flu presence. The sample was also sent to Bangladesh Livestock Research Institute at Savar on the night of following day for further confirmation, he said.

        He also said 100 birds also died of bird flu at a firm of Abu Hossain at Thanapara village under Gopalganj municipality area in the last two days.

        Gopalganj Sadar Upazila Officer of Livestock Depart-ment Awal Haque sent the sample at Manikganj and found the avian influenza on the tes, he added.

        Comment


        • #19
          Re: BANGLADESH: Return of the bird flu threat

          India offers Bangla help with flu tests

          SMS NEWS to 58888 for latest updates
          NEW DELHI: Indian labs may soon start testing Bangladesh's bird samples to identify the highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza virus.

          In a confidence-building gesture, India is planning to ask its eastern neighbour, crippled by a severe bird flu outbreak, to send ground samples to labs here for rapid testing and genetic sequencing.

          While India has world-class bio-security level (BSL) III and IV labs, like the High Security Animal Disease Laboratory (HSADL) in Bhopal and National Institute of Virology (NIV), Pune, to test bird samples, Bangladesh, that is overburdened with its worst-ever bird flu outbreak, lacks such diagnostic facilities.

          While 13 of the 19 districts of West Bengal have been affected by H5N1 in India, the outbreak in Bangladesh is much more severe. The H5N1 virus was first detected there in March 2007. Since then, over 39 of Bangladesh's 64 districts have been affected by bird flu.

          In an exclusive interview to TOI from Dhaka, secretary of Bangladesh's ministry of fisheries and livestock Syed Ataur Rahman had said that samples are being sent all the way to the OIE Reference Laboratory for Avian Influenza in Weybridge, UK, for testing.

          "Bangladesh does not have its own facility to genetically sequence virus strains. That's why samples are being continuously sent to Thailand and UK," Rahman said.

          In response, India's animal husbandry secretary Pradeep Kumar said the country was planning to extend a helping hand to its neighbouring countries in testing their samples.

          He told TOI: "Helping our neighbours would in turn be helping ourselves. If the virus can be contained in the neighbouring countries, the virus would pose lesser danger to India. We are planning to formally offer India's help to Bangladesh in testing avian samples."

          Rahman had told TOI that a joint secretary level officer, Parikhit Dutta Ray, had been appointed as a liaison officer in Dhaka to especially deal with India's requests including setting up joint monitoring teams, sharing virus information and control and containment operations. In response, Kumar said India too was finalizing a joint secretary level mechanism which would facilitate exchange of information.

          (kounteya.sinha@timesgroup.com)

          http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/a...,prtpage-1.cms
          [/COLOR]

          Comment


          • #20
            Re: BANGLADESH: Return of the bird flu threat

            Combating Bird Flu

            It now appears that the country is facing a wave of Avian Influenza (Bird Flu). The disease is a highly contagious one. It has by now contaminated poultry birds in about 40 districts of the country -from Dinajpur to Chittagong. Several hundreds of thousands of birds (Chicken) have died, huge number of birds already burned and many more under threat of contamination. In all, a near endemic situation is prevailing in the poultry sector.

            It would be really hard for this emerging sector of the economy to bear and eventuality to make up the loss the sector has already suffered. The marginal farmers of rural areas are the worst affected.

            On paper, the government seems to be responsive to the problem but at the ground level the response is much too inadequate.

            The virus needs to be contained. And that should be the responsibilities of the administration. The farmers, particularly the marginal ones, need immediate rehabilitation which is needed to save this emerging multi-million dollar sector economy of the country.

            Lapses or delays would be rather too costly for the economy if it is ruined forever.






            Abu Musa Miah

            Lalbagh, Dhaka

            Comment


            • #21
              Re: BANGLADESH: Return of the bird flu threat

              The information flowing out of India and West Bengal is mixed to say the least. Put on your waders.
              Please do not ask me for medical advice, I am not a medical doctor.

              Avatar is a painting by Alan Pollack, titled, "Plague". I'm sure it was an accident that the plague girl happened to look almost like my twin.
              Thank you,
              Shannon Bennett

              Comment


              • #22
                Re: BANGLADESH - Foyers d'infection de grippe aviaire

                Traduction automatique

                Environ 20.000 volailles cueillies dans Dinajpur

                DINAJPUR, 8 fév. (UNB) : Environ 20.000 volailles étaient cueilli et 25 oeufs détruit dans la région de Matasagar de Sadar Upazila mercredi et jeudi.

                Les fonctionnaires de bétail de zone ont déclaré qu'ils ont cueilli les volailles et ont détruit oeufs dans six fermes de volaille de 11 P.M. mercredi à 10 AM jeudi ensuite détection de la grippe d'oiseau dans le secteur.

                ******************************

                Some 20,000 fowls culled in Dinajpur

                DINAJPUR, Feb 8 (UNB): Some 20,000 fowls were culled and 25 eggs destroyed in Matasagar area of Sadar Upazila Wednesday and Thursday.

                District livestock officials said they culled the fowls and destroyed the eggs in six poultry farms from 11 pm Wednesday to 10 am Thursday after detection of the bird flu in the area.

                Get latest stock share market news, financial news, economy news, politics news, breaking news, Bangladesh economy news at The Financial Express.

                Comment


                • #23
                  Re: BANGLADESH: Return of the bird flu threat

                  When the bird flu

                  Antara Dev Sen is Editor of The Little Magazine, an independent publication devoted to essays, literature and criticism on social concerns and issues neglected by mainstream media (www.littlemag.com). Sen has earlier worked as a senior editor with The Hindustan Times and The Indian Express, among other assignments.
                  The bird flu strikes in unexpected ways. It has now taken a swipe at our Olympic aspirations. The national badminton camp scheduled to start on February 7 was cancelled at the last minute, due to a lack of shuttlecocks. Because those are made of goose feather. And geese, like chickens, have been affected by the bird flu and are out of bounds.


                  Such foul news crushed aspirants who had hoped to hone their skills for the big badminton championships coming up, including the Olympic Games this summer.

                  Too bad, said the Sports Ministry, never mind if we don't add another feather to our cap, we can't allow shuttlecocks from bird-flu-hit China. As with most consumer goods, China appears to be dominating the shuttlecock market. Sadly, even our domestic shuttlecocks from our own birds have disappeared after the bird flu scare. And given the real danger of avian flu, there isn't much point in raising a racquet.

                  Before this sporting blow, it was a culinary disaster for meat-eaters. Mutton is bad for the health - certainly after a certain age - and poultry was fast disappearing from the menu, at least in eastern India. As the bird flu took wing, you could feel the change in attitude, especially in roadside eateries.

                  The raffish street wit of Kolkata updated you on the health hazard. It started with eateries brandishing cheekiness with chicken curries, cutlets, omelettes and devilled eggs. “Old stock!” they grinned, “all pre-bird flu stuff. Very stale, very safe. Trust me, there isn't a single fresh chicken or egg here! Don't worry - come and eat!” People did.

                  Days passed, the scare increased, the tune changed. “Blood flu, blood flu!” roadside vendors called out loudly, getting their words mixed up in their rush to lure passersby, tossing chicken kathi rolls invitingly on the tawa over a blazing flame. “Check out this heat - that wretched virus has no chance! Here, try one.” They reeled out temperatures that kill the virus, egging on the nervous, sneering at the gutless, celebrating the brave who stepped up to eat.

                  But as the West Bengal government stepped in, determined to exterminate the infection, even the bravest chickened out. Poultry disappeared from markets and dining tables as good Bengalis clucked in disgust and turned more enthusiastically to their first love, fish.

                  Meanwhile, millions of chicken were being killed across the state, at the first sign of the flu in the neighbourhood. Headless chickens once again dominated news-space, months after Ronen Sen's idiomatic English almost got his own head chopped off. (Why, he had snapped at a reporter, were journalists and politicians running around like headless chickens agitated about the Indo-US nuclear deal? And spent the next weeks and months offering craven apologies in all directions.)

                  As millions of birds were culled in Bengal, local cynics gave a bird's eye view. What a terrible time for Bengali birds, they moaned, can't be idle, can't take a siesta, can't be yourself! The moment one sits down to relax, they rush in and kill the whole flock!

                  Humour helps, but it doesn't protect us from viruses. For that we need information, concerted effort, political will, health infrastructure, adequate funds and cross-border cooperation. Unfortunately, we are somewhat lacking in almost all of the above. Now, Bangladesh's refusal to reveal which strain their bird flu virus is strikes yet another blow to India's efforts to fight its worst attack of the disease.

                  In order to pinpoint the source of infection in West Bengal - strongly suspecting that it was infected poultry smuggled in from Bangladesh - the government of India had asked its neighbour for genetic details of the strain of bird flu that has been wreaking havoc in Bangladesh since last year. But Bangladesh declared that the sequencing is not done yet, and they don't have any details to offer.

                  Experts doubt this stand, because it is impossible to fight the virus without knowing what to fight, and Bangladesh has been struggling with the avian influenza for a year. Besides, their genetic sequencing was reportedly completed in the UK last year. Refusing to share information on a potential pandemic that could kill millions across the globe defies common sense, ethics and political wisdom.

                  For the flu which begins with birds passes on to humans, killing people with a vengeance. In Indonesia alone, of the 126 people sick with this flu, 103 have died. And the toll goes up every day or two. More worryingly, health authorities in Indonesia now seem to be uncertain about the cause of its spread. After studies conducted around victims and their surroundings, they could not decide on the risk factors for human infection. Which means that the virus could be spreading far more dangerously than thought, making it very difficult to snap the chain of infection from birds to humans.

                  And once it becomes a human flu, the virus may mutate, become airborne and even drug resistant. It can travel the world freely, posing enormous dangers to unsuspecting people in distant lands - like commuters, air-passengers, travellers by train or bus or car - anyone at all, since these days we travel a lot and stay ensconced in air-conditioned comfort even more, breathing each other's breath in the canned, recycled air.

                  As the world gets smaller and we get cosy in the global village, such silent, natural biological bombs could devastate us all. Infections like the avian flu in humans could pose a bigger hazard than the new strains of drug resistant tuberculosis that have already surged in developing countries and terrified the developed world.

                  Curiously, bird flu has been around for years, and has been infecting humans since 1997. The rate of human infection has galloped in the last year, and every day it gets grimmer. The only way to check this is by sharing information. Regional and international borders become irrelevant in the face of this global danger.

                  Given this reality, it's time the international community wakes up and helps poorer countries battle this virus. The worst affected countries are in Southeast Asia, and now Bangladesh seems to be in the thick of it, even though it doesn't want to admit it - like China chose to downplay it in the initial stages, causing much harm to the world's health.

                  West Bengal may have contained the present crisis, but the virus is not about to go away. And it may have already spread to neighbouring Bihar, Orissa and other states. Besides, the northeastern states bordering Bangladesh are probably infected as well. And it may have spread to Nepal, given the open borders and dodgy trade routes that operate through the narrow stretch of West Bengal between Bangladesh and Nepal - popularly and quite innocently known as the Chicken's Neck.

                  Like India, Bangladesh too is densely populated and the poor have very little access to healthcare or sanitation, have even less awareness of the dangers or ways to prevent infection, and also raise chicken and ducks in their backyards. Once infected, it is ideal breeding ground for the bird flu. Unlike India, though, Bangladesh is still in denial and refuses to see the threat or share information on it. Unless the international community steps in, it would be very difficult to fight this global threat.

                  We need to think long-term and address trade practices, poultry rearing norms, lifestyle changes, health infrastructure and general education.

                  Because the bird flu is not just a localised, temporary crisis. Headless chickens, as Ronen Sen would confirm, are just the beginning.

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Re: BANGLADESH: Return of the bird flu threat

                    <TABLE cellSpacing=2 cellPadding=2 width="99%" align=center border=0><TBODY><TR><TD colSpan=2>Poultry farm owner arrested for dumping dead chickens on road and water in Ctg
                    </TD></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top colSpan=2>
                    Owner of Azizia Poultry Farm at Hathazari was arrested today for dumping Avian Flu infected dead chickens on the road and canal.

                    Police said Mohammad Ali was arrested in the afternoon following a case filed against him by the local Livestock Officer.

                    Ali on Wednesday dumped scores of dead chickens of his farm in open place posing serious threat of spreading bird flu and hazards to human health.

                    Dumping chickens died of bird flue in open place was in violation of strict order of the government.

                    --UNB, Chittagong

                    </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
                    CSI:WORLD http://swineflumagazine.blogspot.com/

                    treyfish2004@yahoo.com

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Re: BANGLADESH: Return of the bird flu threat

                      <TABLE style="FLOAT: left" cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=2 width=1><TBODY><TR><TD></TD></TR><TR><TD style="BORDER-RIGHT: #667 0px solid; BORDER-TOP: #667 0px solid; BORDER-LEFT: #667 0px solid; BORDER-BOTTOM: #667 1px solid" align=left bgColor=white></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
                      Fish price soars as people turn away from chicken


                      Bird flu update


                      Saturday February 09 2008 00:35:15 AM BDT


                      Culling of chickens is continuing in the country. Some 20,000 fowls were culled and 25 eggs destroyed in Matasagar area of Sadar upazila in Dinajpur yesterday.( The New Nation )

                      Due to the endemic of bird flu across the country 40 per cent poultry farms have shut down and price of fish has increased further in the city kitchen markets. Fish is being sold at Tk 40 to Tk 50 more from the price of the previous weeks taking advantage of the lull in the sale of chicken.

                      Meanwhile, experts at a press conference in the city urged the Caretaker Government (CG) to take measures so that migratory birds do not come in contact with the local birds.

                      They also urged the CG to implement the ban on import of poultry and poultry related items from the effected countries for the prevention of avian influenza, virus of bird flu, in Bangladesh.

                      The press conference on 'Upcoming bird flu disaster in Bangladesh: Ways to remedies' organised by Bangladesh Poribesh Andolon (BAPA) at Moni Singh- Farhad Trust Auditorium yesterday.

                      Prof Muzaffar Ahmed, President of BAPA, presided over the conference, while Dr SK Roy, scientist of ICDDR,B, Dr Md Abdul Motin, General Secretary of BAPA, spoke on the occasion.

                      The speakers urged the CG to increase quality and number of laboratory with facilities for virus identification of chicken and ensuring use of mobile laboratory kits across the country.

                      They demanded to increase ability, manpower and financial assistance of the national avian influenza task force.

                      In Dinajpur, district livestock officials said they culled the fowls and destroyed the eggs in six poultry farms from Wednesday night to yesterday morning after detection of the bird flu in the area.

                      About 50,000 fowls, ducks and pigeons were culled and one-lakh eggs destroyed in the last one week in the district, they said.
                      http://bangladesh-web.com/view.php?hidRecord=186794
                      CSI:WORLD http://swineflumagazine.blogspot.com/

                      treyfish2004@yahoo.com

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Re: BANGLADESH: Return of the bird flu threat

                        <TABLE cellSpacing=3 cellPadding=0 width=280 align=center bgColor=#ffffff border=0><TBODY><TR><TD><TABLE height=16 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100&#37;" bgColor=#5876b2 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD align=left width="57%" height=16></TD><TD width="9%"></TD><TD width="34%">
                        </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR><TR><TD>
                        </TD></TR><TR><TD width=300>A man on a bicycle carries chickens in Dhaka on Thursday not knowing he could be helping bird flu spread.</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
                        http://www.southasianmedia.net/News_...try=Bangladesh
                        CSI:WORLD http://swineflumagazine.blogspot.com/

                        treyfish2004@yahoo.com

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Re: BANGLADESH: Return of the bird flu threat

                          <TABLE class=contentpaneopen><TBODY><TR><TD class=contentheading width="100%">No bird flu in dead crows found in Dhaka </TD><TD class=buttonheading align=right width="100%"></TD><TD class=buttonheading align=right width="100%"></TD><TD class=buttonheading align=right width="100%"></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE class=contentpaneopen><TBODY><TR><TD class=createdate vAlign=top colSpan=2>Friday, 08 February 2008 </TD></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top colSpan=2><SCRIPT language=JavaScript type=text/javascript>var sburl4157 = window.location.href; var sbtitle4157 = document.title;</SCRIPT><SCRIPT language=JavaScript type=text/javascript>var sbtitle4157=encodeURIComponent("No bird flu in dead crows found in Dhaka"); var sburl4157=decodeURI("http://www.independent-bangladesh.com/200802081582/metropolitan-news/no-bird-flu-in-dead-crows-found-in-dhaka.html"); sburl4157=sburl4157.replace(/amp;/g, "");sburl4157=encodeURIComponent(sburl4157);</SCRIPT>Staff Correspondent
                          No avian influenza virus was detected in the crows that were found dead in the capital on Monday and the sick crow collected from Gulshan Lake Park on Tuesday, officials said.
                          ?The test result showed no sign of avian influenza in the dead crows and the sick one,? said Dr Mosaddek Hossain, chief veterinary officer of Central Veterinary Hospital.
                          </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
                          independent-bangladesh.com is your first and best source for all of the information you’re looking for. From general topics to more of what you would expect to find here, independent-bangladesh.com has it all. We hope you find what you are searching for!
                          CSI:WORLD http://swineflumagazine.blogspot.com/

                          treyfish2004@yahoo.com

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            Re: BANGLADESH: Return of the bird flu threat

                            Govt to set up 17 labs to test bird flu

                            Bss, Ctg


                            <TABLE cellSpacing=2 cellPadding=2 width=200 align=right border=0><TBODY><TR><TD></TD></TR><TR><TD class=osdn-navtext>
                            Eggs stack up at this wholesale store on Tejgaon Station Road in the capital yesterday as egg sales dropped to 3,000-5,000 from 80,000 a day at the store due to bird flu scare. Photo: STAR
                            </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>The government is contemplating setting up 17 laboratories across the country, including one in Chittagong, with the financial assistance of USAID for screening bird flu properly.

                            Fisheries and Livestock Secretary Syed Ataur Rahman disclosed this at a meeting of the stakeholders on bird flu situation and to review the precautionary measures taken so far to tackle the menace.

                            The meeting prohibited carrying of poultry birds and their eggs to and from Chittagong for the next 15 days.

                            Director general of Livestock Department Sunil Chandra Bose, Chittagong Divisional Commissioner, Hossain Jamil, Deputy Commissioner, Ashraf Shamim, Member-Secretary of Chittagong Poultry Industry Association Rakibur Rahman Tutul and poultry farm owner, Mohammad Iqbal, among others, spoke at the meeting.

                            Upazila nirbahi officers (UNOs), district and upazila level officials of Livestock Department and a good number of poultry farm owners participated in the meeting held at Chittagong Circuit House conference room in the morning.

                            Addressing the meeting, the fisheries and livestock secretary said all stakeholders of the sector should come forward to supplement the government's efforts to tackle the situation.

                            He urged the poultry farm owners to take steps to ensure area-wise bio-security together with small traders.

                            He also requested them to conduct a weeklong assessment programme with the help of experts of Chittagong Veterinary and Animal Science University to ascertain the overall state of bird flu in greater Chittagong.

                            Earlier, the fisheries and livestock secretary along with the officials visited the Karnaphuli Market in the port city to see the precautionary measures taken in combating the bird flu. http://www.thedailystar.net/story.php?nid=22727
                            CSI:WORLD http://swineflumagazine.blogspot.com/

                            treyfish2004@yahoo.com

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              Re: BANGLADESH: Return of the bird flu threat

                              28,000 chicks killed in fire at poultry farm
                              Jind, Feb 9 (UNI) At least 28,000 chicks were charred to death and property worth lakhs of rupees was reduced to ashes today when fire swept through a poultry farm in village Ikkas in this district. The fire was apparently triggered by a short circuit and spread across so fast within minutes that not even a single chick could be saved. At least 100 sacks full of chicken feed and property worth at least nine lakh was also gutted in the fire, owner of the farm, Jitendra, told UNI. The fire tenders had to battle the blaze for over two hours before it could be doused, he said.
                              http://www.deepikaglobal.com/ENG3_su...NG3&subcatcode=
                              CSI:WORLD http://swineflumagazine.blogspot.com/

                              treyfish2004@yahoo.com

                              Comment


                              • #30
                                Re: BANGLADESH: Return of the bird flu threat

                                Bird flu spreads to another Bangladesh district

                                <!-- END HEADLINE --> <!-- BEGIN STORY BODY --> 2 hours, 28 minutes ago

                                Bird flu has spread to another district in Bangladesh despite efforts by authorities to contain it, taking the number of affected districts to 40, officials said on Sunday.
                                Health workers culled nearly 12,000 fowls after tests confirmed some chickens had died from the avian influenza virus in the northeast, livestock officials said.
                                The H5N1 virus, first detected in Bangladesh in March last year, was quickly brought under control through aggressive measures, including culling. But follow-up monitoring eased in later months prompting the disease to reappear, experts say.
                                So far, no human infections have been reported in Bangladesh, a densely populated nation with millions of backyard poultry and thousands of chicken farms.
                                The interim government has enhanced compensation for poultry farmers to encourage them to report and kill sick birds.
                                More than half a million birds to be culled across the country, but the virus has spread to more than half the South Asian country's 64 districts partly due to a lack of awareness.
                                Media reports said many children were seen smiling and playing with dead poultry. Even health workers have been seen burying dead birds without any protective gear.
                                The World Health Organization worries that the H5N1 strain, which has already killed more than 220 people worldwide since 2003, could mutate into a form that passes easily between humans and infect and kill millions.
                                (Reporting by Ruma Paul; Editing by Bill Tarrant)



                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X