Nov. 2, 2005

U.S. Urges Caution In Poultry Ban

Coordinating Anti-Flu Strategy With China

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    • A Vietnamese seller looks as her client chooses the ducks she is selling at a market Nov. 2, 2005.

      A Vietnamese seller looks as her client chooses the ducks she is selling at a market Nov. 2, 2005.  (AP)

    • A Thai man tends his fighting cocks at his house on the outskirts of Bangkok, Oct. 28, 2005. Five Southeast Asian countries will discuss cooperation on combating the spread of bird flu.

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    • Vietnamese workers clean slaughtered chicken at a market in Hanoi, Vietnam Wednesday, Nov. 2, 2005

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(CBS/AP)  A U.S. official held talks with Chinese officials on coordinating anti-bird flu strategy on Wednesday and urged caution in banning poultry imports, warning that excessive steps could discourage governments from reporting outbreaks.

Meanwhile, Vietnam banned raw blood pudding and poultry-raising in major cities as Asian governments stepped up measures to prevent a potential human outbreak. A Chinese drug company was in talks with the Swiss maker of the anti-flu drug Tamiflu about the possibility of producing it in China.

Charles Lambert, a U.S. deputy undersecretary of agriculture, said Chinese agriculture and quarantine officials have agreed to step up technical cooperation and information exchanges.

"If countries overreact and are overly punitive in their reaction when this disease is reported, that reduces the incentive for other countries to report," Lambert said at a news conference.

China and Vietnam both have banned poultry imports from countries with outbreaks. Vietnam has suffered more than 40 of the 62 human deaths from bird flu in Asia since 2003, while China has had three outbreaks in birds in recent weeks but no human cases.

Lambert said U.S. producers sell $500 million worth of poultry a year to China.

In related developments:

  • A swan that flew into Croatia from neighboring Hungary carried the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu, the agriculture ministry said Wednesday. Hungary's Agriculture Ministry said it was not planning to increase the number of tests on birds nor introduce new preventive measures beyond those already in place.

  • On Wednesday, China's Premier Wen Jiabao announced sweeping new anti-bird flu measures, ordering more aggressive research on a vaccine, tighter disease monitoring and punishment for failure to report outbreaks.

  • A 50-year-old woman in a northern suburb of the Thai capital of Bangkok was diagnosed with bird flu, Deputy Public Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul said Monday Oct. 31, 2005. She is the third case this year.

  • On Oct. 28, Chinese and Thai officials called for measures to prevent an outbreak that they warned could infect millions of people. In China, officials went on television to try to reassure the public, saying they were capable of stopping the virus. They said human cases would be quarantined and warned that anyone who tries to hide and outbreak would be punished.

  • Indonesian Agriculture Minister Anton Apriyantono warned that the virus could spread quickly through the densely populated archipelago since wild pigeons and other birds already were infected.

    Continued



    ©MMV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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