Mass
cull in Shanghai as bird flu toll mounts
All
poultry slaughtered in Chinese city's market where new H7N9 strain
has now been linked to six deaths.
4
April, 2013
China
has announced a sixth death from a new bird flu strain, while
authorities carried out the slaughter of all poultry at a Shanghai
market where the virus was detected in pigeons being sold for meat.
The
mass bird killing on Friday is the first so far as the Chinese
government responds to the H7N9 strain of bird flu, which has
sickened 16 people, many critically, along the eastern seaboard in
its first known infections of people.
The
first cases were announced on Sunday.
Health
officials believe people are contracting the virus through direct
contact with infected fowl.
Gregory
Hartyl, spokesman for the World Health Organisation (WHO), said that
the risk of the virus being spread between people was still a cause
for concern.
"We
may be seeing very few isolated cases of limited human-to-human
transmission," Hartyl told Al Jazeera from Geneva, Switzerland.
Hartyl
said that WHO was following up more than 500 contacts in regards to
the virus.
"Of
these now 16 confirmed cases that we have, and now these over 500
contacts, a couple of them do have signs of fever, or of runny nose,
or of other flu symptoms, which means that until we know exactly
what's happened with these contacts, we wouldn't want to say that
there's no human-to-human transmission," Hartyl said.
"What
we would say, however, is that it's very limited if there is."
Potential
global pandemic
Scientists
are watching closely to see if the flu could potentially spark a
global pandemic.
The
Agriculture Ministry confirmed late on Thursday that the H7N9 virus
had been detected in live pigeons on sale at a produce market in
Shanghai.
The
killing of birds at the Huhuai market started on Thursday night after
the city's agricultural committee ordered it in a notice also posted
on its website.
State
media on Friday ran pictures of animal health officials in protective
overalls and masks working through the night at the market, taking
notes as they stood over piles of poultry carcasses in plastic bags.
The
area was guarded by police and cordoned off with plastic tape.
Experts
urged Chinese health authorities to keep testing healthy birds,
saying the H7N9 virus can infect birds without causing disease,
making it harder to detect than the H5N1 bird flu virus that is more
familiar to Asian countries.
H5N1
set off warnings when it began ravaging poultry across Asia in 2003
and has since killed 360 people worldwide, mostly after close contact
with infected birds.
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