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Last updated on May 29, 2012 at 22:14 EDT

India battles bird flu, virus kills Azeri dog

March 15, 2006
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By Krittivas Mukherjee

MUMBAI (Reuters) – Health workers went door-to-door looking
for people with bird flu symptoms in western India on
Wednesday, while the virus killed a dog in the former Soviet
state of Azerbaijan.

Denmark became the latest European country to report a case
of highly pathogenic bird flu in wild fowl, although it has yet
to confirm it is the feared H5N1 strain that has killed around
100 people in Asia and the Middle East.

Neighboring Sweden said on Wednesday that tests had
identified H5N1 in two wild ducks found on its east coast,
confirming its first outbreak.

In recent weeks, bird flu has pushed deep into Europe,
taken hold in Africa and flared anew in Asia, adding urgency to
efforts to contain its spread and prevent a pandemic.

While it remains mostly a disease of poultry, bird flu can
occasionally infect humans who have direct contact with sick
birds.

Scientists fear it is only a matter of time before the H5N1
virus mutates into a form that passes easily among people,
triggering a pandemic which could kill millions and cripple the
global economy.

Indian officials said they were checking if the latest
outbreak — which occurred in backyard poultry in Jalgaon
district of Maharashtra state — was the deadly H5N1 strain.

Three young women who died in recent weeks in Azerbaijan,
on the crossroads between Europe and Asia, are thought to be
the latest human victims of the virus.

Azerbaijan said on Wednesday that bird flu had been
detected in a stray dog found in the capital Baku on March 9.

There have been recent reports of H5N1 infections in
Germany in cats and a marten, a weasel-like creature.

The World Health Organization says that only domestic
poultry are know to have played a role in transmitting the
virus to humans, but has also called for further investigation
into the significance of infection in other mammals.

INDIA TAKES NO CHANCES

Afghanistan is virtually certain the deadly H5N1 strain of
bird flu has been found in chickens, but is awaiting one final
test for confirmation, a government official said on Wednesday.

The government said on Monday an H5 subtype bird flu virus
was confirmed in three chickens in Kabul and two in the eastern
province of Nangarhar.

“Five cases have registered positive for H5N1,” said
Mustafa Zahir, director-general of the National Environmental
Protection Agency, referring to test results from Italy.

“We’re 99 percent sure but there is one test left to
confirm it,” he told Reuters.

The secretive Asian state of Myanmar has also just detected
its first case of H5N1 and the virus appears to be spreading.

Thousands of chickens have been slaughtered on five more
farms in central Myanmar after hundreds of birds died of bird
flu-like symptoms, the U.N. food agency said on Wednesday.

The five farms are in the same area in Mandalay Division,
430 miles north of Yangon, where the country’s first outbreak
of the H5N1 virus was found on two farms on March 8.

After its first outbreak last month in birds, also in
Maharashtra, India tested more than 100 people for bird flu but
all proved negative.

“We are not taking any chances and are straightaway going
for a household check to see if there are any people with
flu-like symptoms,” Vijay Satbir Singh, Maharashtra’s most
senior health official, told Reuters.

“If need be, we are ready to quarantine people with
flu-like symptoms in local hospitals,” he said.

Health workers carrying kits used for collecting blood
samples visited houses asking families with poultry if anyone
had fever, cough or cold, Singh said.

The first outbreak resulted in the loss of millions of
dollars to the large poultry industry in India where it is
estimated that more than half the 1.1 billion population eat
chicken.

(For more stories, pictures and video on bird flu see
http://today.reuters.com/news/globalcoverage2.aspx?src=cms)

(Additional reporting by Robert Birsel in Kabul, Aung Hla
Tun in Yangon, Oliver Bullough in Moscow, John Acher and Per
Bech Thomsen in Copenhagen, Niklas Pollard in Stockholm)


Source: reuters