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  • #31
    Re: Bird flu (H5N1) confirmed in Nepal

    <TABLE class=txt cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="95%" align=center border=0><TBODY><TR><TD class=txtheading>Culling of Birds Begins in Jhapa Today</TD></TR><TR><TD> </TD></TR><TR><TD class=news>THT Online</TD></TR><TR><TD class=news>Jhapa, January 18:

    Culling of birds at the 'bird-flu crisis-hit area' in Kakarbhitta of Mechinagar municipality-10 will begin on Sunday. Jhapa Assistant Chief District Officer Laxman Prasad Hamal said over 13,000 birds in 3-kilometre radius of Mechi Customs Office in Kakarbhitta would be culled beginning Sunday.
    According to Veterinary Centre Jhapa chief Dilip Sapkota, a team of specialists led by Dr RK Khatiwoda of Bird Flu Control Project arrived in Jhapa from Kathmandu today. Dr Sapkota added that a control room had been established in Mechinagar municipality building today. Assistant CDO Hamal said the bird flu outbreak was discovered when 8-10 chickens belonging to Ramesh Karki of Mechinagar municipality-10 died mysteriously in the second week of January.
    Teaming up in tens, the specialists would cull the birds. The government has decided to compensate for that. Sapkota added that they were cautious not to let the disease spread to other areas.
    A meeting held here today made a decision not to allow the sale of the checked poultry, Hamal said. According to district veterinary office, 350 poultry farms and 1,35,000 chickens were in their watch. Police said the watch had been extended to Damak and bordering Gaurigunj as well. The import of birds has also been banned in bordering areas in Ilam.
    Local administration said public awareness campaigns had been launched in some places in the district. After the outbreak in Jhapa, bordering districts have also been kept under alert. Administration has extended its watch over the import and export of birds in Morang's Biratnagar, Rupandehi's Sunauli, Parsa's Birgunj, Nepalgunj's Rupaidiya, among others.
    Our correspondent said that Chitwan district, which is flourishing in poultry farming, has also been kept under alert.

    http://www.thehimalayantimes.com/ful...eDate=20090118</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

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    • #32
      Re: Bird flu (H5N1) confirmed in Nepal

      Source: http://www.thehimalayantimes.com/ful...eDate=20090118

      Culling of Birds Begins in Jhapa Today

      THT Online
      Jhapa, January 18:

      Culling of birds at the 'bird-flu crisis-hit area' in Kakarbhitta of Mechinagar municipality-10 will begin on Sunday. Jhapa Assistant Chief District Officer Laxman Prasad Hamal said over 13,000 birds in 3-kilometre radius of Mechi Customs Office in Kakarbhitta would be culled beginning Sunday.
      According to Veterinary Centre Jhapa chief Dilip Sapkota, a team of specialists led by Dr RK Khatiwoda of Bird Flu Control Project arrived in Jhapa from Kathmandu today. Dr Sapkota added that a control room had been established in Mechinagar municipality building today.
      Assistant CDO Hamal said the bird flu outbreak was discovered when 8-10 chickens belonging to Ramesh Karki of Mechinagar municipality-10 died mysteriously in the second week of January.
      Teaming up in tens, the specialists would cull the birds. The government has decided to compensate for that. Sapkota added that they were cautious not to let the disease spread to other areas.
      A meeting held here today made a decision not to allow the sale of the checked poultry, Hamal said. According to district veterinary office, 350 poultry farms and 1,35,000 chickens were in their watch. Police said the watch had been extended to Damak and bordering Gaurigunj as well. The import of birds has also been banned in bordering areas in Ilam.
      Local administration said public awareness campaigns had been launched in some places in the district. After the outbreak in Jhapa, bordering districts have also been kept under alert.
      Administration has extended its watch over the import and export of birds in Morang's Biratnagar, Rupandehi's Sunauli, Parsa's Birgunj, Nepalgunj's Rupaidiya, among others.
      Our correspondent said that Chitwan district, which is flourishing in poultry farming, has also been kept under alert.

      Comment


      • #33
        Re: Bird flu (H5N1) confirmed in Nepal

        Source: http://www.kantipuronline.com/kolnews.php?&nid=175939

        Outrage in Jhapa over slow response
        Kantipur Report

        BIRTAMOD, Jan 18 - People living in parts of Jhapa district bordering India blocked vehicular movement on Saturday to protest what they called "lack of seriousness" on the part of the government to control the outbreak of bird flu.

        They got infuriated as government officials did not show up at the affected area soon after the outbreak.

        Dilli Ghimire, a local, said, "Twenty-four hours have passed since the government declared parts of Jhapa bird flu-infected area, but the administration has not sent officials to the affected area to control the outbreak. This is ridiculous".

        Just two technicians are spraying Vircon, a disinfectant, in and around the infected area, he said. Locals fear the delay on the part of the government to control the outbreak will result in a number of casualties, he said.
        On Friday, the government had declared emergency in areas that lie within a radius of three kilometres from the quarantine office in Kakkarbhitta, the gateway to eastern Nepal. The emergency-hit area straddles the Mechi River in the east, Mechi Municipality in the west, Nakalbanda in the north and Satighatta in the south.

        Manas Banerjee, coordinator-director at the Avian Influenza Control Project under the Ministry of Health, said on Friday that the government had sent a medical team along with 65 supervisors to cull the infected birds. He added that the medial experts and supervisors would cull around 13,000 birds in five days.

        Banerjee said on Saturday, "The team has been conducting surveillance in the affected area. All the 65 supervisors have been given antiviral medicine called Tamiflu to keep infection at bay." "In a bid to contain the outbreak, the government has banned the transportation of poultry products to and from Jhapa and barred locals from the affected area," he said.

        Meanwhile, a team comprising officials from the Department of Animal Husbandry under the Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives arrived here on Saturday.

        Ram Krishna Khatiwada, chief of the Central Quarantine Office and the team leader, said a rapid response team would be mobilised in the affected area from Sunday.

        Meanwhile, a report from Ilam states that District Administration Office (DAO) has sounded alert after bird flu was detected in Kakarbhitta of Jhapa. The DAO has directed checkposts to prohibit the import of poultry and poultry products in Ilam. According to Sudharshan Dhakal, Chief District Officer of Ilam, "All departments under the DFO have been told to ban the import of poultry products."

        On Saturday, the DFO destroyed 800 chicken eggs at Chabbise of Shri Antu in the district.

        Meanwhile, poultry farmers based in Biratnagar said the compensation offered by the government was too little.
        On Friday, the government had promised to compensate the farmers, whose birds would be culled, as per the law.

        Representatives from the District Poultry and Traders Association on Saturday said the government was not providing compensation as per the market price of chickens. Poultry

        farmers will not cooperate with the government's exercise if their concerns are not addressed, the association said.

        Posted on: 2009-01-17 19:45:40 (Server Time)

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        • #34
          Re: Bird flu (H5N1) confirmed in Nepal

          Nepal calls for foreign assistance in Bird Flu control
          Kantipur Report
          BIRGUNJ, Jan 18 - Minister for Agriculture and Cooperatives Jayaprakash Prasad Gupta Sunday has called on foreign donor organisations to assist in eliminating the recent outbreak of Bird Flu in the country.

          ?Although Nepal has manpower, it lacks the resources,? he said at a programme in Birgunj.

          The government on Friday confirmed that first outbreak avian influenza after the H5N1 virus were detected in chickens of Mechi Municipality-10, Kakadbhitta of Jhapa district. The area within the range of three kilometres from Municipality has been declared ?Bird Flu Emergency Area?.

          10 ?killing groups? have been deployed to cull the chicken, duck and other bird at the area from today, the Agriculture Minister informed.

          He claimed that entire birds and bird-related matters will be destroyed by four-five months.

          Comment


          • #35
            Re: Bird flu (H5N1) confirmed in Nepal

            <TABLE class=lan18 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="97%" align=center border=0><TBODY><TR><TD class=hei22 vAlign=bottom height=25>Surveillance tightened in east Nepal after bird flu scare
            </TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffffff height=4></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="50%" align=center border=0><TBODY><TR><TD height=8></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="97%" align=center border=0><TBODY><TR><TD width="48%">www.chinaview.cn 2009-01-18 18:35:15</TD><TD class=hui12 align=middle width="26%"> </TD><TD class=hui12 align=middle width="12%"> Print</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="80%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD height=20></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE class=lt14 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="97%" align=center border=0><TBODY><TR><TD class=lt14>


            KATHMANDU, Jan. 18 (Xinhua) -- The local authorities of bordering districts in eastern Nepal have more tightened surveillance after bird flu was detected in chicken in Mechinagar Municipality of Jhapa district, some 320 km southeast of Nepali capital Kathmandu.

            Specialist teams have started culling chicken and other birds and destroying poultry production in Mechinagar, which has been declared bird flu risk zone by government on Friday.
            An expert team led by Dr. Ram Krishna Khatiwada, head of Bird Flu Control Project, had already reached the affected area from Kathmandu and has begun his work, local news website Nepalnews reported on Sunday.
            Three kilometers periphery of the customs office in Mechinagar has been declared bird flu risk zone.
            The local administration of Jhapa has reported as saying more than 13,000 birds will be culled and safely disposed in Mechinagarand surrounding areas. Apart from culling birds and destroying poultry products, tools used in poultry firms will be sterilized, reports quoting local authorities said.
            Around 350 poultry firms in the area are now under bird flu surveillance while the import of birds from bordering India has been tightly controlled, reports quoting local officials said.
            Meanwhile, Nepali national news agency RSS on Sunday reported, team of specialists deployed to control bird flu in Jhapa district are facing difficulties after the Poultry Entrepreneurs Union, Jhapa declined to assist the team.
            According to the report, Union has decided to deny assistance to the team reasoning that the compensation fixed by the Agriculture Ministry was very low for destroying the birds and poultry products.
            The report quoted Khatiwada, head of the expert team as saying that "the team was unable to provide compensation to any poultry entrepreneur against the rule and regulation fixed by the government." Cabinet meeting on Friday had announced bird flu outbreak in Nepal for the first time which was first found in Jhapa district. The announcement came after laboratory tests conducted in London showed bird flu in chicken samples taken from a household in Mechinagar. Avian influenza commonly known as bird flu is an infection caused by avian (bird) influenza (flu) viruses and it can also infect humans. Avian influenza is very contagious among birds and can quickly make domesticated birds sick and kill them.

            </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="50%" align=center border=0><TBODY><TR><TD height=15></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE class=hei12 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="90%" align=center border=0><TBODY><TR><TD align=right height=25>Editor: </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

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            • #36
              Re: Bird flu (H5N1) confirmed in Nepal

              <TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=1 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD height=5>Bird culling to begin today </TD><TD> </TD></TR><TR><TD> </TD><TD>UPENDRA LAMICHANE
              BIRJUNG, Dec 18: Minister for Agriculture and Cooperatives Jay Prakash Gupta said that 10 culling teams have been dispatched Sunday to destroy birds and bird products in the bird flu affected areas.

              Speaking at a press conference organized by the Reporters Club of Birgunj, Minister Gupta informed that the culling teams will destroy all the ducks, chicken, pigeons and other birds in the affected areas within 5 days. Along with the birds, bird feed is also to be destroyed.

              ?I use this event to ask help from the World Food Program, European Union and World Health Organization to sort out the problem,? said Gupta.

              He also urged the locals to support the move and expressed concern over the protest by locals who have demanded higher compensation than what the government is giving them.

              ?I urge the locals not to ask for compensation for the birds. We need the support of the locals so that the epidemic doesn?t spread to other areas of the country,? he said.

              The minister ended the event by eating an egg served at the Press Conference, to dismiss fears of bird flu in the area.



              </TD><TD width=5> </TD></TR><TR><TD height=2></TD><TD colSpan=2></TD></TR><TR><TD align=right colSpan=2></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

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              • #37
                Re: Bird flu (H5N1) confirmed in Nepal

                Source: http://www.newsonair.com/news.asp?ca...onal&id=IN6463

                Nepal moves to tackle bird flu

                Jan 18
                In Nepal, local authorities in Jhapa district bordering India have tightened surveillance after bird flu was detected in chickens in Mechinagar Municipality on Friday. Specialist teams have started culling chicken and other birds and destroying poultry production in Mechinagar, which has been declared bird flu risk zone by Nepal government. According to official sources, as many as 13,000 birds will be culled and safely disposed in three kilometers periphery of the customs office in Mechinagar, declared as bird flu risk zone.
                Apart from culling birds and destroying poultry products, tools used in poultry firms will be sterilized. An expert team led by Dr R.K Khatiwada, head of Bird Flu Control Project, has already arrived in the affected area from Kathmandu.
                Around 350 poultry firms in the area are now under bird flu surveillance while the import of birds from bordering India has been banned. The announcement on outbreak of bird flu for the first time in Nepal came after laboratory tests conducted in London showed bird flu in chicken samples taken from a household in Mechinagar.

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                • #38
                  Re: Bird flu (H5N1) confirmed in Nepal

                  Surveillance tightened in eastern border after Bird Flu scare
                  Local authorities in eastern Jhapa and Ilam districts have tightened surveillance after Bird Flu was detected in chicken in Mechinagar Municipality of Jhapa district recently.
                  Specialist teams have started culling chicken and other birds and destroying poultry production in Mechinagar, which has been declared Bird Flu risk zone, from Sunday. An expert team led by Dr R.K Khatiwada, head of Bird Flu Control Project, has already arrived in the affected area from Kathmandu.
                  Three kilometers periphery of the customs office in Mechinagar has been declared Bird Flu risk zone.
                  The local administration of Jhapa has said as many as 13,000 birds will be culled and safely disposed in Mechinagar and surrounding areas. Apart from culling birds and destroying poultry products, tools used in poultry firms will be sterilised.
                  Around 350 poultry firms in the area are now under Bird Flu surveillance while the import of birds from bordering India has been tightly controlled, reports quoting local officials said.
                  An emergency cabinet meeting on Friday had announced Bird Flu alert in Jhapa. The announcement came after laboratory tests conducted in London showed Bird Flu in chicken samples taken from a household in Mechinagar.
                  Avian influenza commonly known as Bird Flu is an infection caused by avian (bird) influenza (flu) viruses and it can also infect humans. Avian influenza is very contagious among birds and can quickly make domesticated birds sick and kill them. nepalnews.com mk Jan 18 09

                  Nepal News is Nepal’s first and #1 online news portal. Get breaking news, politics, business, culture, sports, entertainment, analysis, and Nepal facts.

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                  • #39
                    Re: Bird flu (H5N1) confirmed in Nepal

                    Source: http://www.thehimalayantimes.com/ful...eDate=20090119

                    Bird flu scare puts poultry hub on high alert
                    Chintamani Poudel
                    Chitwan, January 18:

                    The district — the hub of poultry industry in the country — is on high alert to prevent the outbreak of bird flu. A meeting, attended by the representatives of the District Administration Office (DAO) and District Livestock Services Office, held here today decided to ensure preventive measures to save the growing industry from the looming crisis at hand. Representatives of security agencies, poultry farmers, entrepreneurs, experts and other stakeholders took part in the meeting, which was chaired by CDO Ratna Raj Pandey.
                    It was decided to enforce quarantine, by managing sale and distribution of poultry products and feed. The government was urged to launch a nationwide campaign on the consumption of poultry products in light of the bird flu scare. Talks revolved around making the district-based National Bird Disease Research Office and livestock services office more technically competent so that the surveillance can be carried on a regular basis. Chitwan contributes to more than 50 per cent of the poultry industry in Nepal.


                    Compensation row disrupts culling operation:
                    Jhapa: Culling began within a radius of three km in Mechinagar Municipality-10 from Sunday. According to assistant CDO Laxman Hamal, 1,472 chickens and four ducks were culled on the first day by 10 Rapid Response Teams.
                    Earlier, the poultry farmers disrupted the culling operation for five hours, protesting insufficient amount of compensation. Public resentment is growing at the lack of preventive measures even though the outbreak of bird flu was confirmed on Friday.
                    The government has fixed the following compensation rates: Rs 500 for a local chicken, Rs 250 for broiler, Rs 100 for backyard ones and 50 paisa for an egg. However, the aggrieved farmers are demanding Rs 400 for a chicken, Rs 20 for a kg of poultry feed and Rs 4 for an egg. — Govinda Chhetry

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                    • #40
                      Re: Bird flu (H5N1) confirmed in Nepal

                      <TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=1 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD height=5>26 districts under high alert </TD><TD> </TD></TR><TR><TD> </TD><TD>PRABHAKAR GHIMIRE
                      KATHMANDU, Jan 19: The government has put 26 districts bordering India under high alert to prevent possible spread of bird flu, said a top government official on Monday.

                      ?Keeping in mind the possible transportation of poultry products from India through the frontier districts, we are on high alert in those districts keeping our surveillance system more vigilant there,? secretary at the Ministry of Agriculture and Co-operative (MoAC) told myrepublica.com.

                      A meeting of government officials and poultry farmers on Sunday has decided to request the Ministry of Home to deploy police along the major highways to conduct vigorous checking of vehicles transporting poultry products.

                      ?We have also requested the poultry farmers during the meeting to co-operate with the government with investigation if other cases are traced in other places? said Purshottam Mainali, joint secretary at the MoAC.

                      According to Mainali, farmers have demanded with the government to resolve the problem of load-shedding and provide relief to them from loss inflicted due to load-shedding.

                      Secretary Thapa also informed that rapid response team deputed in Mechi Nagar Municipality where first case of bird flu was detected, has culled more than 8,500 chickens by Monday afternoon.

                      ?We have deployed 10 teams?six for poultry farms and four for small household farm? for culling chicken in the bird flu area,? said Thapa.

                      Thapa said the government is not increasing the compensation amount demanded by local farmers whose poultry is being culled.

                      The government has set compensation of Rs 500 and Rs 250 for parent chicken of layer and broiler breeds respectively. Likewise all kinds of fowl including chicken and duck have been priced at Rs 100 per head and 50 paisa per egg.

                      Chicken prices nosedive

                      Meanwhile, price of chicken has come down sharply after bird flu was traced in Jhapa on Friday.

                      According to Hari Kumar Rawal, proprietor of Valley Cold Store in Balaju ? one of the biggest chicken wholesaler, the price of chicken meat has come down to Rs 148 per kg on Monday from Rs 190 per kg on Friday while the price of live chicken is down to Rs 100 per kg from Rs 100 per kg.


                      </TD><TD width=5> </TD></TR><TR><TD height=2></TD><TD colSpan=2></TD></TR><TR><TD align=right colSpan=2>
                      Published on 2009-01-19 17:58:03
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                      • #41
                        Re: Bird flu (H5N1) confirmed in Nepal

                        No human casualty in bird flu-hit Nepal
                        Jan 19th, 2009 | By Sindh Today | Category: India
                        Kathmandu, Jan 19 (IANS) Struck with the bird flu virus for the first time, Nepal Monday said no human casualties had been detected so far and declared all districts adjoining India as ?super-critical areas? to stop the virus from spreading.
                        ?Till now, we haven?t come across human infections in Nepal,? said Hari Dahal, spokesman at the agriculture and cooperatives ministry.
                        Dahal also said that the virus had not been detected outside Jhapa district in eastern Nepal, adjoining the border with India?s West Bengal state, where the outbreak was formally acknowledged by the government Friday.
                        To stop the spread of the virus, the government Monday declared all 26 districts sharing a border with India as ?super-critical areas? where poultry products can be sold only after a clean chit by veterinary doctors.
                        From Monday, the agriculture and the home ministries together began conducting examinations along all highways to ferret out illegally smuggled in poultry products.
                        The government also banned the transport of poultry products in public transport.
                        The additional measures were declared after farmers began culling chickens and ducks in Mechinagar town in Jhapa district adjoining the border with India?s West Bengal state where the virus was detected once again a few weeks ago.
                        Farmers estimate around 8,000 birds will have been slaughtered by Monday evening though there is fear about receiving compensation from the government.
                        Poultry farming in Nepal is estimated to have an investment of about NRS 20 billion. The annual trade in poultry products is about NRS 16 billion.
                        With a recent outbreak reported in India?s West Bengal and Assam states, it is felt that the virus could have entered Nepal through eggs or poultry smuggled from across the porous border in defiance of a ban imposed by the Nepal government.

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                        • #42
                          Re: Bird flu (H5N1) confirmed in Nepal

                          Source: http://www.thehimalayantimes.com/ful...eDate=20090120

                          26 border districts under bird flu scanner

                          Himalayan News Service
                          Kathmandu, January 19:

                          The government has intensified its surveillance in 26 border districts in the wake of the outbreak of bird flu at Kakarbhitta, Jhapa, on Friday. Kakarbhitta is contiguous to West Bengal, India. Red alert has been sounded in all the 26 districts.
                          ?Import of birds, poultry and poultry products from India has been banned,? said Tek Bahadur Thapa, secretary, Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives (MoAC).
                          The state organs are keeping a strict vigil on the mysterious death of chickens and birds across the country. The MoAC has urged the Home Ministry to intensify search operations by police personnel in border areas. The police have been asked to frisk vehicles for poultry and poultry products. Culling is currently going on in a three-km radius ? the government has declared it a bird flu-hit area on Friday ? in Mechinagar Municipality-10 of Jhapa district.
                          ?Six Rapid Response Teams are engaged in culling in poultry farms. While, four are busy in backyard farms,? added Thapa. ?No symptom of bird flu has been detected in humans till now. Additional health personnel from Kathmandu and a World Health Organisation team from India have been deployed in Kakarbhitta today,? said Dr Manas Banerjee, coordinator and director, Avian Influenza Control Project, Department of Health Service. He also spelt out the symptoms of avian influenza among humans. ?High fever along with cough and sore throat are the tell-tale signs. Exposure to infected birds and poultry products can lead to the transmission of the virus among humans,? explained Dr Banerjee.

                          Day II: Culling gains momentum:
                          Damak: The culling operation to tackle the outbreak of bird flu is in full swing in Mechinagar Municipality-10 of Jhapa district. Around 8,000 chickens, 11 ducks and 11 pigeons were culled on Monday. Ten Rapid Response Teams have been pressed into service, who are busy destroying poultry feed and eggs as well. The dead ones are being buried in Tokla Tea Estate. The Federation of All Nepal Peasants issued a statement on Monday, demanding ?appropriate compensation for the poultry farmers?. Representatives of Mechi Chamber of Commerce and Industry also organised an all-party meeting on Monday to combat the menace. Aggrieved locals, however, alleged that the government?s awareness drive was yet to take off. ? Kumar Luintel

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                          • #43
                            Re: Bird flu (H5N1) confirmed in Nepal

                            Source: http://www.thehimalayantimes.com/ful...eDate=20090121

                            Bird flu comes to nepal : Panel moots relief for farmers

                            Himalayan News Service
                            Govt urged to help all those, who are bearing culling brunt

                            Kathmandu, January 20:

                            Culling continued unabated in the three-km radius of Mechinagar Municipality of Jhapa district on the third day today. So far, Rapid Response Team personnel have managed to cull 13,000 chickens and birds at Kakarbhitta since the operation began on Sunday. The government announced the outbreak of bird flu last Friday. ?At a conservative estimate, around 1,500 chickens and birds are still to be culled. Fortunately, no symptom of the disease has been detected in humans yet. The outbreak is restricted to Kakarbhitta,?
                            said Dr Pratap Kumar Pathak, Director General (DG), Department of Livestock Services.

                            The Committee on Natural Resources of the legislature-parliament today urged the Maoist-led government to write off the bank loans of those poultry farmers, who have been hit hard by the ongoing culling operation. The panel also wants the ruling coalition to introduce an economic rehabilitation package after three months that will help the poultry farmers to start the trade afresh. Tek Bahadur Thapa, secretary, Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives (MoAC), admitted that the government had been hamstrung by acute crunch of resources to prevent the spread of the deadly H5N1 strain of the virus. ?Samples can be tested in our laboratory. But, they have to be sent abroad for confirmation, which is not only time consuming but also expensive,? explained Thapa.

                            He cited the example of India as a case in point. ?India has built a laboratory at a cost of Rs 1 billion. But it needs around Rs 300 million to run it,? added the senior official. The panel members have requested the government to review compensation for poultry farmers, who have to bear the culling brunt. ?Despite heightened surveillance, poultry products and birds are still being smuggled from India at the dead of night. The porous border is proving extremely difficult to curb smuggling,? said Pathak.

                            Situation under control in ground zero:
                            JHAPA: As the culling operation gathered momentum on Tuesday, the Rapid Response Team personnel culled 3,543 chickens, 130 ducks, 21 pigeons and three parrots on the third day. Also, 724 eggs and 85 kg of poultry feed was destroyed. Dr Dilip Sapkota, chief, livestock services centre, Jhapa, maintained that the situation was under control. ?Surveillance has been intensified in a radius of 10-km. Preventive measures are also in place,? he said. ? HNS

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                            • #44
                              Re: Bird flu (H5N1) confirmed in Nepal

                              Source: http://www.thehimalayantimes.com/ful...eDate=20090121

                              Poultry Business in Peril in Jhapa

                              THT Online
                              Damak, January 21

                              Poultry business in the Jhapa district has fallen down due to the outbreak of avian influenza.
                              Mohan Tajpuriya owns a fresh house to sell chicken at Damak Chowk but his business is nil for the past five days.
                              "It was only source of earning livelihood for my family, however, I am not making a single penny these days," Tajpuriya said, adding, "I used to sell at least 30 kg of chicken everyday before the outbreak of bird flu but there is no sale now."
                              If the situation remained same, he would have no choice but to change the business, he said.
                              "I have closed the shop after the outbreak of the disease," MD Smile of Birtamod said.
                              Not only the chicken shops but also the poultry farmers are hit hard. Anuj Bhattarai, a poultry farmer in Budhabare, said that he was worried about his future.
                              "The farmers, who are running the business by taking loan from the bank, are badly hit," Parshu Sitaula, chairman of the District Poultry Farmers Association (PFA) said. "The future of over 400 poultry farmers is grim."
                              More than three dozens of poultry farmers of Mechinagar Municipality and adjoining areas have already abandoned their business.
                              The poultry entrepreneurs have demanded the government to introduce special relief for them.
                              "Some three crore rupees has been invested in the poultry farming in the district," Sitaula said. "Though the local administration has banned sale and distribution of the poultry products in the three km radius of the flu crisis-hit area, it has affected the business all over the district," Sitaula added.
                              "As the sale and distribution of the poultry product is halted, it will be better to provide us compensation by culling our chickens," he added.

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                Re: Bird flu (H5N1) confirmed in Nepal

                                Source: http://www.kantipuronline.com/kolnews.php?nid=176340

                                Over 13 thousand birds culled in Jhapa
                                Kantipur Report

                                JHAPA, Jan 20 - The rapid response team formed to slaughter birds and bird related items in Kakkarvitta in Jhapa district, where the bird flu virus was detected, completed its first phase of operation on Tuesday. Around 13000 birds and other bird related items were destroyed during the three-day campaign.


                                The government launched the campaign to control the spread of the disease by culling birds in the region following the first ever confirmation of an outbreak of the viral disease in Mechi Municipility, bordering India, declaring the region within a three-kilometer radius of Kakkarvitta as emergency.

                                Technical team comprising experts and doctors formed the rapid response team and started working on it from Sunday afternoon.
                                Central Animal Quarantine Chief and Bird flu control team coordinator Dr. Ram Krishna Khatiwada said that the first phase of the work has been completed and the second phase will begin from tomorrow.

                                According to Dr. Khatiwada, only the remaining small number of birds and eggs will be destroyed from tomorrow.

                                Saying the birds are being culled in an effective manner, Assistant Chief of Jhapa district Laxman Hamal informed that the dead chickens have been sent for laboratory tests. "The results are yet to arrive," added he.
                                After destroying the collected chickens, ducks and eggs from the local farmers' houses the rapid response team buried them in a nearby jungle of Tokla tea garden.


                                The test carried out in a UK lab confirmed the H5N1 strain of bird flu virus in the dead chickens from the poultry farm of one Ramesh Karki in Mechi Municipality-10.

                                Meanwhile, the Ministry of Agriculture today warned that it would take strong action against the ones who do not comply with the government's campaign to cull birds in the area kept on high alert.
                                Posted on: 2009-01-20 07:14:02 (Server Time)

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