Make Homepage
Advertise
Partners
About Us

 

  Subscribe to the Newsletter
 
 
HOMEPAGE NEWS SECURITY COLUMNISTS OP-ED ARTICLES INTERVIEWS BOOK REVIEWS

Friday, 25 May 2012
Turkey Europe Middle East Caucasus Central Asia Russia Americas Asia Book Store World Economy Energy
Vietnam to Slaughter Poultry in Big Cities

printable version
send your friend
add comment
Thursday, 17 February 2005

By Nguyen Nhat Lam

HANOI - Vietnam may slaughter poultry in its big cities to prevent the bird flu virus adding to the toll of 13
people it has killed in recent weeks and move bird rearing out of populated centres, a senior official says.

"The killing of all poultry may be conducted in large urban centres, but we can not afford to abandon poultry farming
altogether," Bui Quang Anh, director of the Agriculture's Ministry's Animal Health Department, told Reuters Television
on Thursday.

"Once the outbreak has receded, we will allow farms to hatch eggs again, but poultry farming will be tightly
controlled," Anh said after Ho Chi Minh City ordered the slaughter of all poultry.

Vietnam's largest city, home to 10 million people near the Mekong Delta where the latest outbreak of the deadly
H5N1 began, was the first to order such a complete slaughter.

It had already ordered the killing of all its ducks, which can carry the disease without showing symptoms of the virus,
which kills 80 percent of the humans it infects.

Healthy birds would be frozen and eaten, while sick birds would be destroyed by burning or burial, Anh said.

But poultry raising may never return to urban centres and measures to prevent another epidemic included raising
birds in indoor farms safe from wild birds, Anh said.

"We need to keep poultry away from contact with wild birds, and the best way to do it is to isolate the poultry farms
and concentrate poultry farming," he said.

Migrating wildfowl, which, like domesticated ducks can carry the virus without showing symptoms, are believed to
have brought it to Asia at the end of 2003.

Since then, it has killed 45 people -- 32 Vietnamese, 12 Thais and one Cambodian.

TOUGH ACTIONS

Vietnam's mass cull is the latest tough action taken in its war against a virus experts fear could mutate into a form
which could pass between humans and cause a pandemic that might kill millions in a world without immunity to it.

The Agriculture Ministry has banned hatching and raising of water fowl, such as ducks and geese, until June 30. After
that all breeding facilities would have to register before resuming operations, Anh said.

Provinces which detect no outbreaks within 21 days are allowed to declare themselves free of the virus, but he
declined to say on Thursday when Vietnam might declare itself free of bird flu.

But Anh noted that no new human infection had been reported in the past week and all bird flu patients had been
discharged.

Since December 30, the H5N1 virus has infected 11 people in the south and all have died. However, only two of
seven people who caught it in the north have died, the others recovering in hospital after treatment.

"It is certain that the virus is containable," Anh said, adding that Hanoi was cooperating with international
organisations, including the World Bank and the United Nations, on a bird flu prevention programme that would last
until 2007.

A report by Anh's department said the H5N1 virus had surfaced in three provinces this week.

But the virus, which spread to more than half Vietnam's 64 provinces and cities since re-emerging in December, had
caused no new infections in poultry in nine of the affected provinces over the last three weeks, it said.


Thursday, 17 February 2005

Reuters via Swissinfo
   World

Previous News

Vietnam to Slaughter Poultry in Big Cities

Next News

 LATEST NEWS

One Policeman, Three Attackers Killed in Turkey Suicide Bombing

Critics Warn of ‘Oil Curse’ for Uganda

French President Outlines Early Pullout From Afghanistan

Gunmen Attack Bus, Killing 7 in Southern Pakistan

Protests Erupt in Syria, More Government Attacks Reported

 USER COMMENTS

add comment

no comment
   LATEST NEWS FROM WORLD
   MOST VISITED NEWS (DAILY)
Vietnam to Slaughter Poultry in Big Cities Vietnam to Slaughter Poultry in Big Cities Vietnam to Slaughter Poultry in Big Cities Vietnam to Slaughter Poultry in Big Cities 
Journal of Turkish Weekly (JTW)
USAK House,
Ayten Sok. No:21
Mebusevleri, Tandogan, Ankara, Turkey