Health Officials Confirm New Outbreak of Avian Flu Among Birds in India
15 January 2008 -- Indian health officials have confirmed that an outbreak of bird flu in the eastern part of the country, near Bangladesh, is the deadly H5N1 strain of the virus.
The new outbreak has already killed about 35,000 birds in the state of West Bengal. The state's minister for animal resources, Anisur Rahaman, Tuesday said the poultry deaths were reported from farms in the Morgram village in the Birbhum District, and in south Dinajpur.
West Bengal officials have ordered the culling of all poultry within a few kilometers of the area. Health teams, armed with protective gear and medicine, have also been dispatched to monitor villagers for flu-like symptoms. A quarantine area will also be set up.
No human cases of bird flu have been reported in India, but last July the country reported its first bird flu outbreak among poultry since it declared itself free of the disease in 2006.
According to the World Health Organization, bird flu has killed at least 216 people worldwide since 2003, mostly in Asia.
Source: VOA News
Scroll down for related articles:
Related articles
- 2008-01-16: Health Officials Confirm New Outbreak of Avian Flu Among Birds in India
- 2008-08-14: Nigeria Battles New Bird Flu Strain
- 2008-04-08: China Confirms December Case of Human to Human Bird Flu Transmission
- 2007-12-18: Benin Officials Confirm H5N1 Bird Flu Cases
- 2008-04-15: Scientists Create First Successful Libraries of Avian Flu Virus Antibodies
- 2008-01-24: Bird Flu Spreads to Nearly Half of India's West Bengal State
- 2008-01-16: Indonesian Bird Flu Death Toll Rises to 96
- 2007-12-20: UN: "Avian Flu Not as Serious as First Feared"
- 2007-12-17: WHO Confirms Burma's First Human Case of Bird Flu
- 2007-12-17: Pakistan Confirms First Human Bird-Flu Death
- 2007-12-17: Bird Flu Concerns Persist in Nigeria Before Holiday Festivities
- 2007-12-11: China Warns of Possible Bird Flu Outbreaks