World | India
Markets and roads in Kolkata sprayed
Workers sprayed roads and markets in Kolkata with disinfectants and culled thousands of birds as authorities in eastern India battled to stop an outbreak of bird flu.
- Health workers during their medical check-up before the culling operation at Aima village which is about 25 km from the eastern city of Kolkata.
- Image Credit: EPA
Kolkata: Workers sprayed roads and markets in Kolkata with disinfectants and culled thousands of birds as authorities in eastern India battled to stop an outbreak of bird flu in poultry reaching the crowded city.
Bird flu has spread to 13 of West Bengal's 19 districts and authorities in the communist-ruled state said they were culling sick chickens in a private farm about an hour's drive from Kolkata, one of India's biggest cities.
"We are not taking chances as the farm reported bird deaths and preliminary tests suggest bird flu," said Anisur Rahaman, the state's animal resources minister.
Slaughter continues
More than two million birds have already been culled, but authorities now say they will slaughter thousands of more birds.
They will also ban rearing backyard poultry in infected districts for at least three months.
India was checking hundreds of villagers and health workers for possible symptoms of bird flu, officials said.
Experts fear the H5N1 strain could mutate into a form easily transmitted from person to person, leading to a pandemic, but there have been no reported human infections in India yet.
The World Health Organisation has said it is India's most serious outbreak of bird flu. Authorities say a major problem is that most poultry in the state of 80 million people are raised in backyards and some farmers have resorted to hiding their birds from culling crews.
Farmers raise poultry to earn a little extra money or to ensure a reliable source of protein. Many also say compensation of $1 (Dh3.67) a bird is too low.
Authorities have stepped up efforts to ring-fence the outbreak to keep it spreading to major urban areas in West Bengal and to stop the virus crossing into other states.
Authorities banned selling chicken in Kolkata's Salt Lake area, eastern India's IT hub that houses offices of leading firms such as Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp and IBM.
Asia: Virus picks up steam
Bird flu killed its third victim in as many days in Indonesia and ravaged poultry stocks in Tibet and India yesterday, as the virus picked up steam across Asia.
The death of the 32-year-old man raised Indonesia's human toll to 101 - accounting for nearly half the worldwide total. The man died in the capital on Tuesday, three days after being hospitalised.
In southwestern Tibet, a poultry farm was quarantined after an outbreak of the disease killed 1,000 birds, agriculture officials reported yesterday. More than 13,000 other poultry were killed to prevent its spread.
- AP
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