Re: BANGLADESH: Return of the bird flu threat
<TABLE class=RedTableBorder style="HEIGHT: 483px" cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR style="PADDING-LEFT: 10px" vAlign=top><TD class=articalTitle align=middle>Caution urged on bird flu reporting
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=430 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD class=dates id=hDate height=27>Published: Sunday, 24 February, 2008, 01:25 AM Doha Time</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR><TR style="PADDING-RIGHT: 12px; PADDING-LEFT: 10px"><TD class=articalBody id=artical1 vAlign=top height=345>Our Correspondent
DHAKA: Bangladesh’s leading experts have urged the media to report carefully on bird flu so that interested groups could not take advantage out of the crisis that has hit the country’s embattled poultry sector.
“Vested groups are active to prod the media to create a panicky situation and influence the government to import costly vaccines for making brisk business in the name of controlling avian influenza,??* Dr Muhammed Abdul Karim, an expert working with Bangladesh Agriculture University told a seminar on Friday.
The poultry sector has reportedly lost 40% business since the bird flu breakout last year.
The poultry sector would face the similar fate as the jute industry years ago, which once was the number one export earner, Karim warned.
He said vested groups are also active to damage the readymade garment sector, now the biggest export earner, along with the poultry sector that employs hundreds of thousands of rural poor and meets cheap nutritional demand.
According to statistics, Bangladesh’s poultry sector comprises an uncounted number of backyard and over 150,000 commercial farms and contributes 1.2% to the gross domestic product (GDP).
It has 220m genetically-engineered chickens, 160mn local variety of chickens, 37mn ducks and 7mn pigeons, Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and the Poultry Association sources said.
Authorities so far culled 6.5mn chickens, ducks and pigeons due to bird flu.
The Agriculture Information Centre organised the seminar titled “Things that need to be done to face poultry sector challenges??* at the National Press Club.
“Negative publicity about bird flu has already caused a major damage to poultry sector that has experienced a net loss of 41,650mn taka since the first outbreak of H5N1 in February last year,??* Director General of Bangladesh Livestock Research Institute Dr Mohammed Jahangir Alam said.
Alam, who put forward a number of recommendations to protect the 100bn taka poultry industry, said culling has proved a successful control measure in Thailand and a combination of vaccine and culling together helped Indonesia to control bird flu. But in Bangladesh, he said, decisions have yet to be taken to follow the right path of bird flu control.
He suggested the government to direct banks for providing soft loan to the affected farmers at 2-3% of interest rate to revive the sector.
Cash incentives, he said, can also be an option to encourage farmers to resume the business.
Former vice-chancellor of Bangladesh Agriculture University Prof Abul Kalam Mohammed Amirul Huq said the media should think twice about greater socio-economic impacts before publishing any report on bird flu.
He proposed for developing a one-stop information centre that would provide round-the-clock information on bird flu.
A microbiologist of Sylhet Agriculture University suggested setting up modern slaughterhouses, where unaffected chickens would be slaughtered to minimise losses.
Dr Abdul Mannan of the Department of Agriculture Extension (DAE) said the poultry farmers are already overburdened with their losses and it would not be wise to import vaccine to put extra pressure on them.
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<TABLE class=RedTableBorder style="HEIGHT: 483px" cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR style="PADDING-LEFT: 10px" vAlign=top><TD class=articalTitle align=middle>Caution urged on bird flu reporting

DHAKA: Bangladesh’s leading experts have urged the media to report carefully on bird flu so that interested groups could not take advantage out of the crisis that has hit the country’s embattled poultry sector.
“Vested groups are active to prod the media to create a panicky situation and influence the government to import costly vaccines for making brisk business in the name of controlling avian influenza,??* Dr Muhammed Abdul Karim, an expert working with Bangladesh Agriculture University told a seminar on Friday.
The poultry sector has reportedly lost 40% business since the bird flu breakout last year.
The poultry sector would face the similar fate as the jute industry years ago, which once was the number one export earner, Karim warned.
He said vested groups are also active to damage the readymade garment sector, now the biggest export earner, along with the poultry sector that employs hundreds of thousands of rural poor and meets cheap nutritional demand.
According to statistics, Bangladesh’s poultry sector comprises an uncounted number of backyard and over 150,000 commercial farms and contributes 1.2% to the gross domestic product (GDP).
It has 220m genetically-engineered chickens, 160mn local variety of chickens, 37mn ducks and 7mn pigeons, Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and the Poultry Association sources said.
Authorities so far culled 6.5mn chickens, ducks and pigeons due to bird flu.
The Agriculture Information Centre organised the seminar titled “Things that need to be done to face poultry sector challenges??* at the National Press Club.
“Negative publicity about bird flu has already caused a major damage to poultry sector that has experienced a net loss of 41,650mn taka since the first outbreak of H5N1 in February last year,??* Director General of Bangladesh Livestock Research Institute Dr Mohammed Jahangir Alam said.
Alam, who put forward a number of recommendations to protect the 100bn taka poultry industry, said culling has proved a successful control measure in Thailand and a combination of vaccine and culling together helped Indonesia to control bird flu. But in Bangladesh, he said, decisions have yet to be taken to follow the right path of bird flu control.
He suggested the government to direct banks for providing soft loan to the affected farmers at 2-3% of interest rate to revive the sector.
Cash incentives, he said, can also be an option to encourage farmers to resume the business.
Former vice-chancellor of Bangladesh Agriculture University Prof Abul Kalam Mohammed Amirul Huq said the media should think twice about greater socio-economic impacts before publishing any report on bird flu.
He proposed for developing a one-stop information centre that would provide round-the-clock information on bird flu.
A microbiologist of Sylhet Agriculture University suggested setting up modern slaughterhouses, where unaffected chickens would be slaughtered to minimise losses.
Dr Abdul Mannan of the Department of Agriculture Extension (DAE) said the poultry farmers are already overburdened with their losses and it would not be wise to import vaccine to put extra pressure on them.

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