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  • #16
    Re: India: suspected bird flu in chickens

    Bird flu scare, Results likely to arrive today
    Source: The Sangai Express



    Imphal, July 24: Even as the results of the samples sent to the High Security Animal Diseases Laboratory at Bhopal and the National Institute of Virology at Pune are being awaited to ascertain whether the virus that causes bird flu has landed in Manipur or not, the State Level Committee headed by the Chief Secretary discussed the steps being taken up by the Government to tackle any eventualities today.

    The samples were sent after 132 fowls being reared at a farm within the Imphal Municipality area expired suddenly one after the other.

    Speaking to The Sangai Express today, Doctor Th Dorendro of the Veterinary and Animal Husbandry Department said that the results from Bhopal and Pune may arrive tomorrow.

    The samples were sent to Bhopal and Pune in three batches and all the dead fowls have been buried.

    To a question, Dorendro said that the samples were sent to both Pune and Bhopal to cross check the results.

    If the result is positive, then it has to be announced to the public, he explained.

    The doctor further informed that if the meat is cooked at 70 degree Celsius the virus cannot survive.

    He also advised the people to wash their hands properly with soap after feeding their fowls and not to let children play near the livestock.

    Use of disinfectant after coming into contact with the affected bird also helps in warding off the virus.

    Meanwhile a meeting of the State Level Committee headed by the Chief Secretary was held at his office chamber today.

    Among others, Joint Commissioner in the Union Agriculture Ministry, AB Negi who has been stationed at Imphal for the last couple of days to supervise the measures taken up, was present at the meeting.

    The other officials present at the meeting included the Principal Secretary (Revenue), Health Secretary, Finance Commissioner, Chief Conservator of Forest, Veterinary Secretary, Health Director, Veterinary Director and the DCs of Imphal East and West.

    The meeting discussed at length all the possible measures that may be taken up, if the results from Bhopal and Pune turn out to be positive, said a source.

    During the meeting it was decided to keep at ready, sprayers that may be used to spray medicines to kill the virus in both Imphal East and West.

    The two DCs have also been asked to ensure that JCBs and other equipments that may be needed to dig up the earth and bury the dead fowls are kept ready.

    In case the result which is expected by tomorrow turns out to be positive then all fowls, ducks and other domesticated birds kept within a radius of 5 kms where the death of the fowls was reported, will be culled, said the source.

    SAFETY TIPS
    * The virus dies if the meat is cooked above 70 degree celsius.

    Do not eat under cooked chicken or duck meat.
    * In case one comes into contact with fowls or ducks, then one must wash one's hand carefully with soap.
    * Use of disinfectant is recommended as its use can ward off the virus.
    * Do not let children play near the place where chickens and ducks are kept.

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    • #17
      Re: India: suspected bird flu in chickens

      Manipur tests poultry for bird flu after deaths

      Wed Jul 25, 2007 10:05AM IST

      NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Authorities were testing chickens at a small poultry farm in Manipur for bird flu after a number of birds died suddenly, a senior official said on Wednesday.

      The "unusual mortality" this month left 133 chickens dead out of 144 at the farm in Manipur, said Upma Chawdhry, Joint Secretary of the Animal Husbandry Department.

      "The mortality was sudden, just in the space of a few days," Chawdhry said.

      She added 20 people living on the farm were taking Tamiflu, the most popular drug for treating and preventing bird flu, as well as six veterinary workers as a "matter of abundant precaution".

      The government expects the results from tests on the blood and tissue samples of the birds this week, including for the highly pathogenic H5N1 virus. Chawdhry said the remaining chickens at the farm had been killed and the area sanitised.

      Manipur, a remote state that is racked by separatist violence, borders Myanmar, which has fought outbreaks of bird flu among poultry this year.
      India has reported no outbreak of bird flu in its multi-billion dollar poultry industry or among backyard poultry this year, despite nearly a dozen alerts.
      It declared itself bird flu free last August after two major outbreaks among chickens in the west of the country in 2006.

      India has asked it border guards to prevent people from bringing in poultry illegally from Bangladesh, China and Myanmar, Chawdhry said.

      China and Bangladesh -- which neighbour India's northeast -- have reported bird flu among chickens this year, with China also reporting human cases and deaths due to the H5N1 strain.

      Globally, the H5N1 virus has killed nearly 200 people out of more than 300 known cases, according to the World Health Organisation, while hundreds of millions of birds have died or been slaughtered.

      "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

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      • #18
        Re: India: suspected bird flu in chickens

        India reports new outbreak of bird flu in chickens

        NEW DELHI, July 25 (Reuters) - India declared a fresh outbreak of avian influenza among poultry, the first this year, but a senior official said on Wednesday authorities were yet to confirm if it was the highly pathogenic H5N1 strain.

        "We have avian influenza," Upma Chawdhry, joint secretary of the federal Animal Husbandry Department, told Reuters.

        The outbreak was located in a small farm in remote Manipur state in the country's northeast where 133 chickens out of 144 suddenly died this month, Chawdhry said.

        "The state government has been informed and asked to start the control and containment operations," she said.

        Thomson Reuters delivers technology with purpose — empowering professionals to make faster decisions, gain sharper insights, and deliver greater impact.

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        • #19
          Re: India: bird flu in chickens suspected / confirmed

          India reports new outbreak of bird flu in chickens

          (Updates with details)

          By Kamil Zaheer

          NEW DELHI, July 25 (Reuters) - India declared a fresh outbreak of avian influenza among poultry, the first this year, but a senior official said on Wednesday authorities were yet to confirm if it was the highly pathogenic H5N1 strain.

          "We have avian influenza," Upma Chawdhry, joint secretary of the federal Animal Husbandry Department, told Reuters.

          The outbreak was located in a small farm in remote Manipur state in the country's northeast where 133 chickens out of 144 suddenly died this month, Chawdhry said.

          "The state government has been informed and asked to start the control and containment operations," she said.

          Manipur, a remote state that is racked by separatist violence, borders Myanmar, which has fought outbreaks of the H5N1 strain of bird flu among poultry this year

          At least 20 people living on the farm were taking Tamiflu, the most popular drug for treating bird flu, as well as six veterinary workers as a "matter of abundant precaution," Chawdhry said earlier on Wednesday.

          Health workers involved in containing the infection in the area will also be given Tamiflu, she said.

          The government plans to hold a news conference on Wednesday evening.

          India has not reported until now an outbreak of bird flu in its multi-billion dollar poultry industry or among backyard poultry this year, despite nearly a dozen alerts.

          India declared itself bird flu free last August after two major outbreaks among chickens in the west of the country in 2006.

          Border guards have been ordered to stop people from bringing in poultry illegally from Bangladesh, China and Myanmar, Chawdhry said.

          China and Bangladesh -- which neighbour India's northeast -- have reported bird flu among chickens this year, with China also reporting human cases and deaths due to the H5N1 strain.

          Globally, the H5N1 virus has killed nearly 200 people out of more than 300 known cases, according to the World Health Organisation, while hundreds of millions of birds have died or been slaughtered.

          Thomson Reuters delivers technology with purpose — empowering professionals to make faster decisions, gain sharper insights, and deliver greater impact.

          Comment


          • #20
            Re: India: bird flu in chickens suspected / confirmed

            Manipur:

            Click image for larger version

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            ...when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth. - Sherlock Holmes

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            • #21
              Re: India: bird flu in chickens suspected / confirmed

              Bird flu hits Manipur; govt plans ahead

              25 Jul, 2007,


              NEW DELHI: UPA Government has woken up from deep slumber after 133 chicken deaths have been reported from Manipur due to the deadly bird flu.

              Sources divulged that following consultations with Prime Minister's Office (PMO), the centre has decided to set up a central control room in the Agriculture Ministry to prevent spread of bird flu to other parts of the country.

              The control room that will also have officials from Health and Animal Husbandry Departments will send out alerts across the country and seek information on any suspected cases of 'bird flu' in their respective areas.

              Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar is expected to review the "confirmed reports" of large scale bird flu tha has hit a Chingmeirong farm in Manipur earlier this month.

              It is learnt that Pawar would brief the Prime Minister and other senior Cabinet colleagues on the bird flu that has hit the North Eastern state possibly due to a virus H5N1 which must have travelled from across Myanmar and Bangladesh borders.

              "Situation is grim" said an official on condition of anonimity. "The bird flu is likely to hit the economic sentiment at macro level while the poultry industry and their stocks are bound to be impacted" said this official source.

              This is the third case of bird flu that has been reported with earlier cases in Maharashtra and villages bordering Gujarat.

              Sources said that the High Security Animal Diseases Laboratory in Bhopal has apparently confirmed the cases of bird flu after serum analysis extracted from the dead chicken in Imphal.

              What is interesting is that the bird flu cases have been reported despite claims that a regular sero-surveillance was being done. This surveillance includes collection of birds' serum from across the country that is analysed on monthly basis at five designated laboratories in the country.

              However, only the laboratory in Bhopal has the wherewithals for final confirmation of bird flu cases that have had serious impact on even advanced economies of the world.

              As per existing norms, the import of live birds or their parts from countries with a record of bird flu is banned in to.

              Chicken feed is seen as one another source of bird flu that could have hit the farm in Imphal.

              However, the final analysis is yet awaited.

              Meanwhile, the impacted area near Imphal has been quarantined till further investigations are done to prevent the spread of this dreaded disease that has turned out to be a challenge for several South, South-East Asian Economies.

              UPA Government has woken up from deep slumber after 133 chicken deaths have been reported from Manipur due to the deadly bird flu.

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              • #22
                Re: India: bird flu in chickens suspected / confirmed

                Confirmed cases in Bangledesh and Mayanmar

                Comment


                • #23
                  Re: India: bird flu in chickens suspected / confirmed

                  Originally posted by Dutchy View Post
                  Bird flu hits Manipur; govt plans ahead

                  25 Jul, 2007,


                  Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar is expected to review the "confirmed reports" of large scale bird flu tha has hit a Chingmeirong farm in Manipur earlier this month.


                  http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/...ow/2232047.cms
                  Chingmeirong added

                  http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UT...,12.172852&z=6
                  Last edited by HenryN; July 25, 2007, 06:47 AM.

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                  • #24
                    Re: India: bird flu in chickens suspected / confirmed

                    Test results may be available tomorrow:

                    We were put on this earth to help and take care of one another.

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Re: India: bird flu in chickens suspected / confirmed

                      <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=600 align=center border=0><TBODY><TR><TD width=44>Title</TD><TD width=10>:</TD><TD width=546>India reports first bird flu outbreak in nearly a year </TD></TR><TR><TD width=44>By</TD><TD width=10>:</TD><TD width=546></TD></TR><TR><TD width=44>Date</TD><TD width=10>:</TD><TD width=546>25 July 2007 1902 hrs (SST) </TD></TR><TR><TD width=44>URL</TD><TD width=10>:</TD><TD width=546>http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stori...290312/1/.html </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
                      <TABLE borderColor=#cccccc cellSpacing=5 borderColorDark=#cccccc cellPadding=3 width=600 align=center borderColorLight=#cccccc border=1><TBODY><TR><TD>NEW DELHI: India on Wednesday reported an outbreak of bird flu among poultry, the first since it declared itself free of the disease last August.

                      The government's department of animal husbandry said on its website that the outbreak had occurred on a farm in northeastern Manipur state, where 132 of 144 chickens died earlier this month.

                      The department did not say whether the chickens had succumbed to the highly pathogenic H5N1 strain of avian influenza.

                      India declared itself free of bird flu last August after a February 2006 outbreak which saw authorities kill tens of thousands of birds.

                      Manipur state borders Myanmar, which has reported two outbreaks of the H5N1 strain among its poultry flocks this year.

                      Myanmar has not reported any human cases of bird flu.

                      The WHO has recorded 319 cases of bird flu in humans, of which 192 resulted in deaths, according to the most recent tally dated Wednesday.

                      Scientists worry the bird flu virus could mutate into a form easily spread among humans, leading to a global pandemic with the potential to kill millions.

                      There have been fears that the virus could spread easily to humans in India, a country of more than one billion people where many live in close proximity with poultry. - AFP/yy


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                      • #26
                        Re: India: bird flu in chickens suspected / confirmed

                        Originally posted by Amish Country View Post
                        Test results may be available tomorrow:

                        http://www.e-pao.net/GP.asp?src=1..250707.jul07
                        Tomorrow is today (report is dated July 24).

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Re: India: bird flu in chickens suspected / confirmed

                          Government calls for calm<TABLE style="WIDTH: 405px; HEIGHT: 44px; BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0><TBODY><TR><TD class=caption style="WIDTH: 360px">
                          July 25 2007 at 03:55PM </TD></TR><TR><TD style="HEIGHT: 1px; BACKGROUND-COLOR: #cccccc" colSpan=2></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=23 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD class=svarticletext>India on Wednesday reported an outbreak of bird flu among poultry, the first since it declared itself free of the disease last August, sparking public fears despite official calls for calm.

                          The government's department of animal husbandry said on its website that the outbreak had occurred on a farm in northeastern Manipur state, where 132 of 144 chickens died earlier this month.

                          The department did not say whether the chickens had succumbed to the highly pathogenic H5N1 strain of avian influenza.

                          "All preventive measures are being taken," Bimal Singh, an official at the state chief minister's office in Imphal, told AFP by telephone.

                          However, people in Manipur were already starting to worry.

                          "People have already stopped eating chicken or even eggs," said Mani Singh, a businessman in Imphal, the state capital.

                          Manipur borders Myanmar, which has reported two outbreaks of the H5N1 strain among its poultry flocks this year.

                          A team of experts from the animal husbandry department were dispatched to Manipur to work out strategies to tackle the outbreak and prevent its spread, Singh said.

                          "Chickens are being culled in a five-kilometre radius from the farm where the deaths were reported," a senior veterinary official said in Imphal.

                          Health officials said there had not been any reports of human illness following the outbreak. Myanmar also has not reported any human cases of bird flu.

                          "We are keeping a check on the health status of the workers involved in the farm where the deaths were reported," a Manipur health department official said.

                          India declared itself free of bird flu last August after a February 2006 outbreak which saw authorities kill tens of thousands of birds.

                          The World Health Organisation has recorded 319 cases of bird flu in humans, of which 192 resulted in deaths, according to the most recent tally dated Wednesday.

                          Scientists worry the bird flu virus could mutate into a form easily spread among humans, leading to a global pandemic with the potential to kill millions.

                          These fears have been especially prevalent in India, a country of more than one billion people where many live in close proximity with poultry.


                          </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

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                          • #28
                            Re: India: bird flu in chickens suspected / confirmed

                            Bird flu in Manipur, safe to take cooked poultry food: Govt.

                            Jul. 25, 2007

                            The government today said bird flu cases have been detected in Manipur and 1.5 lakh birds will be culled to check its spread, but assured it was safe to take "well-cooked" poultry food.

                            "Bird flu appears to be very localised and limited presently to one unit in Manipur. There is no other report of unusual mortality or sickness in other neighbouring north- eastern states," Animal Husbandry Secretary Charusheela Sohoni told reporters here.

                            She said 132 birds of the total flock of 144 birds died in six days from July 7 at a backyard poultry unit at village Chingmeirong in Manipur. About 1.5 lakh birds in a radius of five km from the village will be culled in the next ten days, she added.

                            "Samples of them (in Manipur) are positive for Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) (H5)," Sohoni said.



                            note: not sure, but "lakh" means "thousand" I think; correction: lakh = 100 000
                            Last edited by Gert van der Hoek; July 25, 2007, 01:05 PM.

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                            • #29
                              Re: India: bird flu in chickens suspected / confirmed

                              Commentary at

                              Comment


                              • #30
                                Re: India: bird flu in chickens suspected / confirmed

                                <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100&#37;" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD vAlign=top colSpan=2>India reports bird flu outbreak in northeast


                                07/25/07 03:34 pm (GMT)
                                </TD><TD vAlign=top></TD></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top colSpan=3><SCRIPT type=text/javascript>//Start Ajax tabs script for UL with id="maintab" Separate multiple ids each with a comma.startajaxtabs("calendar")</SCRIPT>

                                NEW DELHI (Thomson Financial) - India's government has reported an outbreak of bird flu among poultry, the first outbreak since it declared itself free of the disease last August.

                                The government's department of animal husbandry said it had started to cull tens of thousands of birds in the northeastern state of Manipur, where 132 of 144 chickens at a small poultry farm died earlier this month.

                                The health ministry said it had rushed "rapid response teams" to test 450,000 people for possible symptoms of bird flu within a ten-kilometre radius of the infected zone in Manipur's Imphal state capital district.

                                Charusheela Sohony, who heads the animal husbandry department, said the infected birds died within a six-day period from July 7.

                                "Samples taken from the dead as well as the remaining stock are positive" for highly pathogenic H5 avian influenza, Sohony said, adding a "containment process" was underway to prevent the disease spreading.

                                She told reporters tests were being carried out to ascertain whether the chickens had the virulent H5N1 strain of avian influenza.

                                "The culling of 150,000 chickens has started in 128 poultry (farms) in a five-kilometre radius of Chingmeirong village where bird flu has been confirmed," she said.

                                "The disease appears to be very localised and limited presently to one unit in the state," said Sohony.

                                Health ministry official Vineet Chowdhury said 21 family members directly exposed to the infected chickens in Chingmeirong were being given the anti-viral drug Oseltamivir.

                                "So far none has showed any symptoms of infection," he said.

                                "We have sent 40 medical teams to survey 80,000 households in a timeframe of ten days," Chowdhury said.

                                Manipur borders Myanmar, which has reported two outbreaks of the H5N1 strain among its poultry flocks this year. Indian officials said authorities were investigating whether the infection had come from outside Manipur.

                                The World Health Organisation has recorded 319 cases of bird flu in humans, of which 192 have resulted in deaths, according to Wednesday's most recent tally.


                                jag/jag


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