BEIJING - China has not provided international 
health agencies with samples of bird flu viruses found in the country since 
2004, but is putting in place procedures to do so, a senior official said on 
Tuesday. 
Scientific analyses of bird flu samples are important because they help 
experts trace the evolution of viruses and the geographical spread of any 
particular strain. 
"When viral strains cross international borders, special protocols are needed 
and we are working to complete those," vice director of the Ministry of 
Agriculture's veterinary department, Li Jinxiang, told a news briefing. 
Li said Beijing wanted "to conform to WHO (World Health Organisation) 
standards for international transfers". 
Though China has not submitted bird flu samples since late 2004, it has 
regularly reported results of its laboratory tests, including genetic 
information, to international bodies, Li added. 
Health experts fear the H5N1 bird flu virus, which has killed at least 140 
people worldwide since late 2003, will mutate into a form that can pass easy 
among humans, sparking a pandemic that could kill millions. 
China was gearing up for the autumn poultry vaccination effort, Li said, 
which would also include monitoring for signs of vaccine-resistant strains. 
China has reported several cases of bird flu in humans in areas without known 
outbreaks among poultry, opening the question whether poultry outbreaks are 
going undetected or are somehow masked by vaccines. 
Nearly 5 billion poultry were vaccinated in the first six months of 2006, Li 
said. Samples taken during that period exceeded those taken in the whole of 
2006, he said. 
But he conceded that there were still some gaps in coverage. 
"We have hit some difficulties in combatting bird flu," Li said, adding that 
infections among wild birds and waterfowl might have allowed the virus to 
proliferate. 
Vaccination drives had also failed to penetrate some remote areas, he 
said.