Meghalaya bans entry of poultry
Shillong, Dec 11: Taking in view that the bird flu is spreading to new areas in neighbouring Assam, Meghalaya on Thursday banned the entry of poultry and poultry products from Assam and Bangladesh.
<!--end of related-box-j-a-->"The ban comes into force with immediate effect. However, the ban does not imply to the sale of poultry and poultry products produced within the state," a Veterinary Department release here said.
A senior Veterinary official told that they were preparing to cull birds and poultry in the bordering areas with Assam as soon as the Centre asks to do so.
"Normally culling operations are done in a radius of 3 km of the place of disease outbreak. With the bird flu outbreak in Assam's Khanapara, lying along Assam-Meghalaya border, it is likely that culling would be done in the bordering areas of Meghalaya too," he said.
Deputy Commissioner of Ri Bhoi district that borders Khanapara in Assam's Kamrup (Rural) district is on a visit to the bordering areas along with a team of Veterinary officials to take stock of the situation.
The government has set up control rooms in all districts to facilitate information to the poultry farms.
Veterinary officials have been regularly adopting measures to prevent spread of the disease into the state and Deputy Commissioners of all the districts have been alerted, sources said.
Meghalaya already has in place 150 rapid response teams along with 2,170 personnel protective equipment that were constituted last year after the outbreak of avian flu in West Bengal.
Bureau Report


A senior Veterinary official told that they were preparing to cull birds and poultry in the bordering areas with Assam as soon as the Centre asks to do so.

Deputy Commissioner of Ri Bhoi district that borders Khanapara in Assam's Kamrup (Rural) district is on a visit to the bordering areas along with a team of Veterinary officials to take stock of the situation.
The government has set up control rooms in all districts to facilitate information to the poultry farms.

Meghalaya already has in place 150 rapid response teams along with 2,170 personnel protective equipment that were constituted last year after the outbreak of avian flu in West Bengal.
Bureau Report
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