Beijing takes anti-flu steps in fowl markets (Reuters) Updated: 2005-10-30 21:38
Beijing authorities have confiscated 182 wild birds from traders and started
disinfecting the city's largest live poultry wholesale market against avian flu,
the Beijing News reported on Sunday.
A Chinese health worker sprays disinfectant
over chickens in cages at a poultry market in China's capital Beijing
October 30, 2005. Beijing authorities have confiscated 182 wild birds from
traders and started disinfecting the city's largest live poultry wholesale
market against bird flu, the Beijing News reported on Sunday.
[Reuters] | "The trading of wild birds will
not be permitted while the avian flu is active," the paper quoted a local
official as saying in Beijing.
It also said the city's largest wholesale market for live poultry was
disinfected three times daily and workers were being tested for the virus.
Poultry markets in China are suffering sluggish sales with customers fearful
after three outbreaks of the deadly bird flu virus in the country in the past
month, reports have said.
The outbreaks of the H5N1 virus, which scientists fear could mutate into a
form that can pass easily between humans and lead to a global pandemic, has
killed 3,800 chickens, ducks and geese in China in the provinces of Inner
Mongolia, Anhui and Hunan.
Most human bird flu infections are due to handling sick birds or through
contact with their droppings. Eating cooked meat is not a known source of
infection.
China has reported no human bird flu infections since the latest H5N1
outbreak surfaced in Asia in 2003.
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