Hong Kong reports bird flu outbreak
Hong Kong: Three dead chickens tested positive for bird flu in Hong
Kong, prompting the city to suspend poultry imports for 21 days and
begin slaughtering 80,000 birds, an official said yesterday.
“We feel that Hong Kong is facing a new alert for bird flu,” said
York Chow, secretary for food and health. Chow said the chickens, found
Monday at a farm with 60,000 birds, had the H5 virus and further tests
were being done to see if they had the deadly H5N1 strain.
The farm and neighboring poultry operations were declared part of an
infected zone, and about 80,000 birds in the area would be killed to
prevent the spread of the disease, Chow said.
He added that the 21-day ban on poultry imports would last through
the Christmas holiday, a time when chicken is an important dish in
celebratory dinners.
Hong Kong’s biggest bird flu outbreak was in 1997, when the H5N1
strain jumped to humans and killed six people. That prompted the
government to slaughter all 1.5 million poultry in the territory.
In 2001, the government also carried out a massive poultry slaughter,
killing 306,000 birds in wholesale and retail markets and 951,000 in
local farms to eradicate an outbreak of bird flu.
HONG KONG, Tuesday, AP |