India: West Bengal On Bird Flu Alert

 

# 1467

 

 

On November 8th of 2007, the OIE certified that India was `bird flu free'.

 

Avian influenza-free status is bestowed if a nation reports no outbreak of bird flu for a period of three months from the time it completes disinfection and clean-up of the previous outbreak site.

 

The last reported outbreak in India was on July 27th, and by August 8th the disinfection and culling operations had been completed.

 

Now, authorities are fearing a new outbreak in West Bengal.   This from The Times of India.

 

 

 

 

West Bengal sounds bird flu alert after chicken deaths


13 Jan 2008, 1955 hrs IST,REUTERS

 

KOLKATA: Preliminary results of tests taken after thousands of backyard poultry died in West Bengal over the past 10 days showed they were infected with bird flu, but it was unclear if it was the H5N1 virus, officials said.


 

More than 10,000 birds died in Margram village of Birbhum district in West Bengal state. "The preliminary tests showed the birds have died from bird flu, but we still don't know whether it is the deadly H5N1 strain," Sunil Kumar Bhowmik, chief medical officer of Birbhum told.

 

"We will quarantine people if we find anybody sick and intensify culling tomorrow morning until we get the confirmation in a few days," Bhowmik said.


 

Thousands of birds in the country were culled in 2006 following three separate outbreaks of the deadly H5N1 virus in the western state of Maharastra.

 

Neighbouring Bangladesh is still reeling under bird flu with around 21 of the country's 64 districts affected by the deadly virus.


 

Experts fear the H5N1 virus might mutate or combine with the highly contagious seasonal influenza virus and spark a pandemic that could kill millions of people.

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