| Shortfalls in bird flu fight warned (Reuters)
 Updated: 2006-10-05 19:06
 Beijing - China still faces serious shortcomings in its 
bird flu prevention preparations and government departments must do better ahead 
of the autumn season, a vice agriculture minister said on Thursday. 
 "At present, 
the bird flu virus situation in our country is generally stable, but as we go 
into the peak outbreak season in the autumn, the prevention situation is still 
serious," Yin Chengjie told a provincial bird flu meeting.
 
 "There still exist weak links in our bird 
flu fight work," he was quoted as saying in a statement posted on the 
Agriculture Ministry's Web site (www.agri.gov.cn 
 
 ).
 
 China this week announced two poultry outbreaks in the remote northwest, 
leading to the culling of thousands of birds, in the first reported cases since 
early August.
 
 Some provinces were preparing too slowly, did not have enough 
staff, vaccines or funds and the problem was especially acute in villages, Yin 
said, without naming specific parts of the country.
 
 It was important to step 
up measures ahead of the autumn, when migrating birds -- which have been blamed 
for outbreaks in the past -- would pass through China again, he said.
 
 "We 
must soberly recognise the seriousness of the current fight against bird flu and 
not underestimate the seriousness of the work," Yin told the meeting, which was 
attended by China's top veterinarian, Jia Youling.
 
 High Alert
 
 Yin said the provinces must ready their emergency response 
systems and ensure there were enough good quality vaccines.
 
 He said his ministry would dispatch teams to 
the countryside to ensure measures being taken were up to scratch.
 
 "We cannot lower our guard," he said.
 
 The H5N1 virus has spread through Asia's 
poultry flocks and infected large numbers of wild birds, particularly water 
fowl, which can act as carriers of the virus.
 
 Bird flu has killed at least 148 people worldwide since late 
2003, when the virus resurfaced in Southeast Asia.
 
 Scientists fear the bird flu virus could 
mutate into a form that could pass easily from person to person, sparking a 
global pandemic.
 
 There have been 21 human cases, 
including 14 deaths, from the virus in China and dozens of outbreaks in birds 
that have led to the culling of millions of fowl.
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