CHINA / National |
China willing to share animal disease info(Xinhua)
Updated: 2007-09-22 18:43 The FAO has recommended the Chinese government organize an regional or international experts mission by the end of the year to inspect all infected regions in China to have a more thorough evaluation of the situation and a workshop on national or regional-level be held to work out further strategies to combat the disease. China has welcomed these recommendations, saying that it is ready to invite international experts for any further inspection or discussion on the issue, according to Martin. Another recommendation suggests China send virus tissue samples to international laboratories for analysis. An agreement on the issue is being worked on between the Chinese government and the FAO, Martin said. The agreement was needed to address in which circumstances and in what way the samples could be used and to define related property rights issues. A recent report by The Washington Post suggested the agreement shows China is reluctant to share data on the virus out of concerns about commercial benefits. "Personally, I don't support such theories. I never felt that (China's reluctance to share information with the international community)," said Martin. "It is totally normal practice. When you talk about sharing of virus or anything, you need to sign an agreement or contract to define the receptive and sender countries and ownership issues," Martin said. "My own experience in China shows that China is very very willing to share knowledge, information and experience in control and surveillance of disease," he said. The Bangkok workshop will gather veterinary officials from Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam to discuss the current situation of the PRRS in the region and draft an emergency and preparedness plan for the disease. So far, "The disease remains an animal disease. It does not infect humans. We've seen many animal disease," said Martin. "We need to be serious with it because there could be possible economic consequences." "We're concerned for the farmers, who are losing their income. That's what FAO and China are now collaborating to do ... We want to avoid these losses," he added.
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