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Latest Bird Flu Blamed on Bird Trading

Experts suspect current bird flu outbreak is mainly result of trade in live birds


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UNITED NATIONS, Feb. 10, 2007
By EDITH M. LEDERER Associated Press Writer
(AP) Experts suspect the current spread of bird flu in Asia, Africa and Europe is mainly a result of trade in infected live birds rather than transmission through wild birds, the U.N. official coordinating the global fight against avian influenza said Friday.

Dr. David Nabarro said investigators looking into the cause of a bird flu outbreak at a commercial turkey farm in Britain are now focusing on a possible link with the transfer of partly processed birds from a farm in southeastern Hungary where there was an outbreak last month.

Britain's Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs said preliminary inquiries indicated the strain of H5N1 bird flu found at the British farm was identical to the strain found last month in Hungary. Environment Minister Ben Bradshaw said the government was investigating whether there were "bio-security breaches" at the British farm, owned by Bernard Matthews PLC, Europe's biggest turkey producer.

Movement of poultry _ either live or dead _ from an area where H5N1 bird flu had been found violates U.N. guidelines, Nabarro said.

The U.N. bird flu chief said the recent upsurge in H5N1 bird flu outbreaks around the world is not a surprise, explaining that there have been seasonal spikes in each of the past few years.

"Since 2003, we've seen a rise in the number of reported outbreaks in poultry and indeed of human cases ... between the period December-April, and we expect that there will be more outbreaks," Nabarro said, adding that new cases could emerge through June.

During the last two months, he said, there have been new outbreaks of bird flu in Indonesia, Vietnam, South Korea, China, Thailand, Japan, Egypt, Hungary, Nigeria and Britain _ and a new outbreak was reported in Turkey.

"And human infections have been confirmed in China, Egypt, Nigeria and Indonesia and they're suspected in other locations as well," he said.

H5N1 has prompted the slaughter of millions of birds across Asia since late 2003 and caused the deaths of more than 160 people worldwide, around a third of them in Indonesia, according to the World Health Organization.

Most people killed so far have been infected by domestic fowl and the virus remains very hard for humans to catch. Nabarro said about half the people infected die.

But experts fear it could mutate into a form that easily spreads among humans, sparking a pandemic with the potential to kill millions.


©MMVII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


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