Bird flu kills girl in Cambodia, woman in China
By Ek Madra
PHNOM PENH (Reuters) – Bird flu has killed a young girl in
Cambodia, the first human victim of the virus in the poor
southeast Asian nation in almost a year, while China said on
Friday a woman in the city of Shanghai had died from it.
Jordan became the latest Middle East country hit by an
outbreak of the virulent H5N1 virus in poultry, but said no
people had been infected.
Bird flu, which has spread from Asia to the Middle East,
Africa and Europe, remains essentially an animal disease but
can infect people who come into contact with sick poultry.
Health experts fear the virus will mutate enough to pass
easily from person to person, sparking a pandemic in which
millions could die.
The World Health Organization (WHO) confirmed the death of
the girl in Cambodia, taking the known death toll from the
virus to 104 since it re-emerged in Asia in late 2003. The WHO
had no immediate comment on the death in China.
Mon Puthy, aged 3, who lived in a village in Kampong Speu
province about 40 miles west of Phnom Penh in Cambodia, had
been in contact with sick and dying chickens, officials said.
She died on Tuesday.
Her death took Cambodia’s human death toll from bird flu to
five. The country’s last victim was a 20-year-old woman who
died in a Vietnamese hospital in April 2005.
Seven other people in the village who had either been in
contact with the girl or sick poultry were showing some signs
of fever, although there was no cause for panic, local WHO
spokeswoman Megge Miller said.
“It looks like another one of those isolated incidents.
There aren’t any alarm bells at the moment,” she said.
Mon Puthy’s 23-year-old mother, Choeun Sok Ny, said she
still had no idea what had killed her daughter, an indication
that bird flu public education campaigns in one of Asia’s
poorest nations still have a long way to go.
“Other children in the village played with the dead
chickens more than my loved one,” she told Reuters by
telephone. “Why are they not sick, and why did my daughter
die?”
CHINA DEATH
China’s Health Ministry confirmed that a 29-year-old woman
in the eastern city of Shanghai had died of bird flu, the
official Xinhua News Agency reported.
The woman, surnamed Li, was a migrant worker who was
initially said to have died of “pneumonia of unknown cause.”
The city government said it suspected bird flu on Thursday.
The latest death is the first known case in Shanghai and
brings to 16 the number of human bird flu cases and to 11 the
number of deaths announced by China. China reported its first
death from the virus in November of last year.
It is not known how the woman contracted the disease. The
city government has not said where she was from, nor how long
she had lived in Shanghai.
There have been no known outbreaks of bird flu among
poultry or other birds in Shanghai. Some of the other human
cases in China have also occurred in areas with no reported
outbreak among birds.
In Jordan, Health Minister Said Darwazeh said at least
three dead turkeys at a domestic farm in Ajloun had tested
positive for the disease.
Twenty people were given the Tamiflu antiviral drug and the
area had been cordoned off to prevent the disease from
spreading further, he told a news conference in Amman.
“The disease in its current form is more of an economic
disease that affects poultry. It has had a very limited effect
on human health,” he said.
Poultry sales have continued a patchy recovery across
Europe as a dwindling number of new bird flu cases has shifted
the media spotlight away from the virus, calming consumer
fears.
In France, which has a 6 billion euro ($7.18 billion)
poultry industry, the largest in the European Union, sales are
now around 7-10 percent down on the same period last year.
(Additional reporting by Lucy Hornby in Shanghai, Dina Al
Wakeel in Amman, David Evans in Paris)
