Feb. 8, 2006

Deadly Bird Flu Strain Hits Africa

Outbreak In Nigerian Chickens Is First Reported Case On Continent

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    • A chicken hovers at the feet of a man holding food on his hand in Lagos, Nigeria, Wednesday Feb. 8, 2006.

      A chicken hovers at the feet of a man holding food on his hand in Lagos, Nigeria, Wednesday Feb. 8, 2006.  (AP)

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      Iraqi health workers collect fowl from local village farms, Tuesday, Feb. 7, 2006, on the outskirts of Sulaimaniyah, 160 miles northeast of Baghdad.  (AP)

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      An Iraqi boy looks at pet birds at a local bird market, Monday, Jan. 30, 2006, in Baghdad, Iraq.  (AP)

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      Iraqi Minister of Agriculture Ali al-Bahadli gives a press conference following his meeting wtih Iraqi President Jalal Talabani in Baghdad 30 January 2006.  (Getty Images/Ali Al-Saadi)

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      Chicken are seen in a coop in the Turkish occupied area at the divided capital of Nicosia, Cyprus, on Sunday, Jan. 29, 2006.  (AP)

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(CBS/AP) 
Thiermann said all the 46,000 birds on the Nigerian farm have been killed and their bodies disposed of and Nigerian authorities have banned the movement of birds and people from the farm to others in the area. Officials also are investigating whether birds were transferred to other farms in the past 21 days, and they, too, are being quarantined, he said.

"We feel that they are doing everything they can and they certainly need help," he said.

Additional protective clothing was being moved Wednesday from Senegal to Nigeria, he said.

Experts had suspected that migrating wild birds could spread the disease to Africa, said Thiermann, noting that Nigeria is on a "major flyway."

A laboratory in Padova, Italy, identified the "highly pathogenic H5N1" in the Nigerian birds, OIE said in a statement. It added further tests were being carried out to determine how close the Nigerian strain was to H5N1 detected elsewhere in the world.

The Italian Health Ministry said the bird flu strain is very similar to those found in Siberia and Mongolia.

The OIE said it was working with U.N.'s Food and Agriculture Organization to "coordinate a common response to this event."

A team of experts to assess and provide technical advice will leave for Nigeria toward the end of this week, said Thiermann, who is a special adviser to the OIE's director.

Bird flu began ravaging poultry stocks across Asia in 2003, forcing the slaughter of 140 million birds and jumping to humans, killing dozens. It has since spread to Europe and the Middle East.

Health officials had feared a deadly bird flu virus could enter impoverished, loosely governed African regions where many people raise chickens at home for personal consumption.

On Monday, Nigerian officials said that initial tests on chickens that mysteriously died in Kano, a state neighboring the state where H5N1 was detected, showed no sign of bird flu.

Nigerian authorities nevertheless urged farmers to monitor their flocks and report strange ailments to authorities. Kano set up a committee of veterinary surgeons to visit farms and watch out for evidence of a bird flu outbreak after some poultry farms reported large-scale bird deaths last week.

Large-scale poultry farms aside, many Nigerian families live at close quarters with chickens and other fowl, which are an important food source. The birds are generally kept with other domestic animals at night but allowed to roam freely during the day.

Controlling the spread of the virus could be particularly difficult in Africa, where central governments often exert little control in far-flung rural areas most likely to have people keeping fowl in their homes.




©MMVI, 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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