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  • Myanmar wins rare praise for bird flu action

    Myanmar wins rare praise for bird flu action



    YANGON (AFP) - The owners hide behind a locked red gate, shaking their heads and refusing to answer questions.

    But nearby residents here in Mayangone Township say these farmers lost everything when officials in protective clothing came and killed all their chickens.

    This is the site of Myanmar's first bird flu outbreak this year, and for once the secretive junta is winning praise from the international community for their response to the potential disaster.

    Authorities in this military-run country have confirmed five outbreaks of the deadly H5N1 avian influenza virus across Yangon since February 28, and have killed nearly 45,000 birds in an attempt to contain the disease.

    "I think they are handling it quite professionally. It is the only advantage of this type of regime, if they decide to seal off, they can be quite efficient," said one Yangon-based diplomat.

    The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation last month hailed the government's response as "quick and effective," and the United States, usually quick to criticise Myanmar, gave the regime 600,000 dollars to help fight bird flu.

    A chicken vendor waits for customers at the market in Yangon
    ? AFP Khin Maung

    The livestock department has set up a strict monitoring system, and banned the movement of poultry, eggs and animal feed in affected areas.

    A resident living near the first outbreak site described how health officials in protective suits and masks, accompanied by military personnel, came to the small city farm and took away two truckloads of chickens.

    "They just said 'this is an outbreak area'," the resident told AFP. "At first I worried that I would be infected, but now nothing has happened."

    Since the outbreak, health officials have returned and educated local residents about prevention of bird flu and kept the area under surveillance.

    "After the outbreak I didn't eat chicken. The authorities closed the nearby markets. They don't sell chicken anywhere," the resident added.

    At nearby Nandawon market, legs of mutton hang from hooks and flies buzz around piles of offal, but there is not an egg or a chicken to be seen. Posters at the entrance warn people to beware of chicken excrement.

    Myo Myint Aung, a 37-year-old poultry vendor, said that market officials came to him on March 3 and told him to stop selling chicken.

    "Now I just sell fish and other things. My income decreased about 70 percent," he said, adding that he understood why the authorities took the drastic action.

    "It is a natural disaster, so that's why we understand," he said. "We are the first ones who can die, we are very close with the birds."

    A chicken vendor waits for customers at the market in Yangon
    ? AFP Khin Maung

    The World Health Organisation website reports that 170 people have died of the human strain of bird flu since 2003, most of them in Southeast Asia. No human cases or deaths have yet been reported in Myanmar.

    The last avian flu scare here was in March 2006, when more than 100 outbreaks were reported in the central city of Mandalay. After killing 660,000 birds, authorities last September declared the country free of bird flu.

    Kyaw Nyunt Sein, deputy director general of the health ministry, said no human cases had been discovered since the Yangon outbreaks.

    "We started monitoring about 1,137 people who were in contact with birds," he said in a recent interview in the administrative capital Naypyidaw.

    "About 371 people are still under surveillance. So far we haven't seen any positive cases," he said.

    One UN official in Myanmar said he was impressed with the regime's transparency over bird flu, but said a human outbreak would be a disaster in a country where the health system is in tatters after decades of underfunding.

    "If you look at the infrastructure that exists, if human cases broke out it would be more difficult than in many other countries in the region," he said. "It would be close to impossible to contain."

    Despite some gloomy predictions, people out and about in affected areas seem unconcerned, with many asking chicken vendors when they will be able to buy the meat again.

    "We have not seen any human cases so we are not afraid at all. For us, we get upset when we see it -- seeing is believing," said one jewelry seller perched behind rows of gold at Nandawon market.

  • #2
    Myanmar lifts restriction on bird-flu-hit areas

    Myanmar lifts restriction on bird-flu-hit areas

    (Xinhua)
    Updated: 2007-04-22 16:14
    <!--enpcontent--> The Myanmar authorities have lifted restriction on transport and sale of poultry and its products in five townships in Yangon hit by H5N1 bird flu after finding no unusual death of poultry there as of Saturday, said an official statement released on Sunday.

    According to its statement, the Livestock Breeding Veterinary Department (LBVD) made the decision after monitoring 205 poultry farms in the five townships of Mayangon, Hlaingtharya, North Okkalapa, Mingaladon and Hmawby up to Saturday with no such unusual poultry death being found.

    "As part of further programs, those from LBVD are to make field trips to farms 3 to 7 kilometers away from the affected farms as well as farms of the states and divisions where they will monitor the virus in three months in order that the country can be declared a bird-flu-free nation," the statement said.

    The statement urged people and breeders to report on dead birds to ensure bio-security and cooperate with the department to prevent recurrence of bird flu.

    Altogether seven poultry farms in the five townships in Yangon were struck by an outbreak of H5N1 bird flu from Feb. 28 to March 30, during which nearly 2,000 fowls died of the virus with 65,812 poultry from the affected farms and those nearby were culled.

    Since the outbreak, Myanmar has been cooperating with experts from the Food and Agriculture Organization and USAID in the fight against the disease.

    According to the Myanmar authorities, no human cases have so far been detected with bird flu virus in Yangon.

    The Myanmar authorities have lifted restriction on transport and sale of poultry and its products in five townships in Yangon hit by H5N1 bird flu after finding no unusual death of poultry there as of Saturday, said an official statement released on Sunday.

    "In the beginning of change, the patriot is a scarce man (or woman https://flutrackers.com/forum/core/i...ilies/wink.png), and brave, and hated and scorned. When his cause succeeds, the timid join him, for it then costs nothing to be a patriot."- Mark TwainReason obeys itself; and ignorance submits to whatever is dictated to it. -Thomas Paine

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Myanmar wins rare praise for bird flu action

      AVIAN INFLUENZA (74): MYANMAR

      [1] Myanmar

      [1] Myanmar
      Date: Sun 22 Apr 2007
      From: Joseph Dudley <fnjpd@uaf.edu>
      Source: Bangkok Post [edited]
      <http://www.bangkokpost.com/breaking_news/breakingnews.php?id=118255>


      Seven poultry farms in Rangoon's neighboring townships have been hit
      by outbreaks of the H5N1 virus since February 2007 leading to the
      culling of 65 812 birds, Sunday dailies reported.

      According to laboratory tests, 24 samples out of 675 samples from the
      affected farms were infected, while the virus was also detected in 6
      samples of the dead crows out of 561 samples taken of wild birds,
      reported The New Light of Myanmar.

      The cullings and sample tests have been conducted in cooperation with
      the UN Food and Agriculture Organization and US Agency for
      International Development, between 6 Mar and 21 Apr 2007.

      Restrictions on transport and sale of poultry and poultry products in
      the 5 townships has since been lifted.


      The government has requested the people and breeders to come forward
      with information on the dead birds, to ensure bio-security and
      cooperate with the department in order to be able to prevent the
      recurrence of bird flu.

      --
      Joseph P. Dudley, Ph.D
      Research Associate,
      Institute of Arctic Biology - University of Alaska Fairbanks
      Department of Earth Science - University of Alaska Museum
      <fnjpd@uaf.edu>

      [An infection rate of 3.5 percent (24/675) in HPAI-affected farms
      seems exceptionally low, unless the sampling was carried out during
      the very early stages of the outbreak (preceding culling?).
      Clarification will help. -
      Mod.AS]

      http://tinyurl.com/32vpey
      CSI:WORLD http://swineflumagazine.blogspot.com/

      treyfish2004@yahoo.com

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Myanmar wins rare praise for bird flu action

        <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=465 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD class=t18>Myanmar lifts restriction on bird-flu-hit areas in Yangon</TD></TR><TR><TD align=right></TD></TR><TR><TD>
        The Myanmar authorities have lifted restriction on transport and sale of poultry and its products in five townships in Yangon hit by H5N1 bird flu after finding no unusual death of poultry there as of Saturday, said an official statement released on Sunday.
        According to its statement, the Livestock Breeding Veterinary Department (LBVD) made the decision after monitoring 205 poultry farms in the five townships of Mayangon, Hlaingtharya, North Okkalapa, Mingaladon and Hmawby up to Saturday with no such unusual poultry death being found.
        "As part of further programs, those from LBVD are to make field trips to farms 3 to 7 kilometers away from the affected farms as well as farms of the states and divisions where they will monitor the virus in three months in order that the country can be declared a bird-flu-free nation," the statement said.
        The statement urged people and breeders to report on dead birds to ensure bio-security and cooperate with the department to prevent recurrence of bird flu.
        Altogether seven poultry farms in the five townships in Yangon were struck by an outbreak of H5N1 bird flu from Feb. 28 to March 30, during which nearly 2,000 fowls died of the virus with 65,812 poultry from the affected farms and those nearby were culled.
        Since the outbreak, Myanmar has been cooperating with experts from the Food and Agriculture Organization and USAID in the fight against the disease.
        According to the Myanmar authorities, no human cases have so far been detected with bird flu virus in Yangon.

        </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
        CSI:WORLD http://swineflumagazine.blogspot.com/

        treyfish2004@yahoo.com

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Myanmar wins rare praise for bird flu action

          Praise for secretive bird flu action
          Charlotte McDonald-Gibson
          Tue, 24 Apr 2007
          Down a dirt road in a northeastern Yangon suburb, a large barn stands empty but for white feathers and piles of chicken excrement that hint at its former occupants.
          The owners hide behind a locked red gate, shaking their heads and refusing to answer questions.
          But nearby residents here in Mayangone Township say these farmers lost everything when officials in protective clothing came and killed all their chickens.
          This is the site of Myanmar's first bird flu outbreak this year, and for once the secretive junta is winning praise from the international community for their response to the potential disaster.
          Response was 'effective'
          Authorities in this military-run country have confirmed five outbreaks of the deadly H5N1 avian influenza virus across Yangon since 28 February, and have killed nearly 45 000 birds in an attempt to contain the disease.
          "I think they are handling it quite professionally. It is the only advantage of this type of regime, if they decide to seal off, they can be quite efficient," said one Yangon-based diplomat.
          The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation last month hailed the government's response as "quick and effective", and the United States, usually quick to criticise Myanmar, gave the regime $600 000 dollars to help fight bird flu.
          The livestock department has set up a strict monitoring system, and banned the movement of poultry, eggs and animal feed in affected areas.
          A resident living near the first outbreak site described how health officials in protective suits and masks, accompanied by military personnel, came to the small city farm and took away two truckloads of chickens.
          'I didn't eat chicken'
          "They just said 'this is an outbreak area'," the resident told AFP. "At first I worried that I would be infected, but now nothing has happened."
          Since the outbreak, health officials have returned and educated local residents about prevention of bird flu and kept the area under surveillance.
          "After the outbreak I didn't eat chicken. The authorities closed the nearby markets. They don't sell chicken anywhere," the resident added.
          At nearby Nandawon market, legs of mutton hang from hooks and flies buzz around piles of offal, but there is not an egg or a chicken to be seen. Posters at the entrance warn people to beware of chicken excrement.
          Myo Myint Aung, a 37-year-old poultry vendor, said that market officials came to him on 3 March and told him to stop selling chicken.
          "Now I just sell fish and other things. My income decreased about 70 percent," he said, adding that he understood why the authorities took the drastic action.
          A natural disaster
          "It is a natural disaster, so that's why we understand," he said. "We are the first ones who can die, we are very close with the birds."
          The World Health Organisation website reports that 170 people have died of the human strain of bird flu since 2003, most of them in Southeast Asia. No human cases or deaths have yet been reported in Myanmar.
          The last avian flu scare here was in March 2006, when more than 100 outbreaks were reported in the central city of Mandalay. After killing 660 000 birds, authorities last September declared the country free of bird flu.
          Kyaw Nyunt Sein, deputy director general of the health ministry, said no human cases had been discovered since the Yangon outbreaks.
          "We started monitoring about 1137 people who were in contact with birds," he said in a recent interview in the administrative capital Naypyidaw.
          "About 371 people are still under surveillance. So far we haven't seen any positive cases," he said.
          One UN official in Myanmar said he was impressed with the regime's transparency over bird flu, but said a human outbreak would be a disaster in a country where the health system is in tatters after decades of underfunding.
          Gloomy predictions
          "If you look at the infrastructure that exists, if human cases broke out it would be more difficult than in many other countries in the region," he said. "It would be close to impossible to contain."
          Despite some gloomy predictions, people out and about in affected areas seem unconcerned, with many asking chicken vendors when they will be able to buy the meat again.
          "We have not seen any human cases so we are not afraid at all. For us, we get upset when we see it ? seeing is believing," said one jewellery seller perched behind rows of gold at Nandawon market. http://business.iafrica.com/features/803087.htm
          CSI:WORLD http://swineflumagazine.blogspot.com/

          treyfish2004@yahoo.com

          Comment

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