Bird flu was detected in China for the first time in
nearly four months after the country declared victory over the virus, the
Ministry of Agriculture said Tuesday night.
The national bird flu reference laboratory Tuesday
confirmed chickens in East China's Anhui province were killed last Saturday by
the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu virus.
Experts suspect the outbreak was caused by migratory
birds.
The virus was found at a chicken farm in the Juchao
District, Chaohu in Anhui.
Local veterinaries initially diagnosed the death from
a probable fatal bird flu contagion on July 3, and reported the case to the
Ministry of Agriculture.
The ministry immediately dispatched a panel of
experts to the affected area.
In accordance with China's Law on Animal Epidemic
Prevention, local health authority destroyed all the poultry within a
three-kilometre radius of the chicken farm and vaccinated all the poultry within
a 5-kilometre radius of the affected area.
Investigations indicate the farm is located on a
slope in a rather separate environment close to the Chaohu Lake and all the
chicks of the farm were bought from local bird-flu-free markets.
Therefore, experts suggested the virus was spread by
migratory or wild water birds.
The new case seemed to echo an earlier warning made
by Jia Youling, a Ministry of Agriculture official, who said in March that there
was still a risk of new outbreaks, perhaps caused by water fowl or migratory
birds.
Jia was not available to comment last night.
He said on March 16 China had stamped out the disease
after ending isolation in the last of 49 hotbeds.
The ministry has informed the Food and Agriculture
Organization of the United Nations about the new case as well as the World
Health Organization and authorities in Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan.
A spokesman for Hong Kong's Health, Welfare and Food
Bureau said last night the special administrative region will temporarily
suspend the importation of live birds and poultry from the Anhui Province
Immediately.
The first outbreak of the H5N1 strain of bird flu was
detected on January 27 at a duck farm in the Dingdang Township, South China's
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.
(Information source: China
Daily)
2004/7/7