| Home | News| Living in China| MMS | SMS | About us | Contact us|
   
 Language Tips > VOA Normal speed news


EU expands anti-bird flu measures

 

EU expands anti-bird flu measures Listen to this story


The EU says it has extended a ban on the importation of birds and feathers from most of Russia. EU spokesperson Pia Ahrenkilde Hansen spoke of Russian and EU efforts.

"The Russianveterinaryservices have implemented all necessary measures to avoid the spread of the disease," she said. "As far as the standing committee on the food chain and animal health meeting today is concerned, that committee this morning has endorsed the ban on pet birds and feathers from Siberia to cover the whole territory with the exception of Kaliningrad, Karelia, Murmansk and St. Petersburg."

The EU decision followed the discovery of the bird flu virus in the Russian village of Yandovka, several hundred kilometers south of Moscow. Residents reported sudden deaths among their domesticated fowl, prompting Russian authorities to impose a quarantine around the village and to destroy all chickens, ducks and geese in the area.

This is the first time that the bird flu virus has been detected in western Russia, prompting fears that thepathogen, believed to be carried from region to region by migratory birds, could spread to other parts of Europe.

Ms. Ahrenkilde Hansen said a preliminary test on a sample from a Greek island came back negative, but more tests were needed.

Elsewhere, officials in Thailand say, a 48-year-old farmer in the western part of the country has died after handling and eating diseased fowl. The man became Thailand's 13th confirmed human death from bird flu, which so far has shown a limited capacity to jump from birds to humans, but has yet to spread by human-to-human contact. At least 120 people have contracted the bird flu virus in southeast Asia in the past two years, resulting in at least 60 deaths in Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia and Indonesia.

In China, Foreign Ministry Spokesman Kong Quan said the spread of the bird flu within his nation appears to have been contained, after more than 90,000 birds were culled from a farm in Inner Mongolia, where thousands of chickens and ducks succumbed to the virus.

"After receiving a report of suspected bird flu in Inner-Mongolia, the Chinese Agriculture Ministry immediately sent a working team to guide the local prevention and control work," he said. "Local governments and sanitary organizations have also taken emergency measures to quarantine, seal or kill and disinfect in accordance to the regulations. Now the epidemic situation is under control and no new infection areas have been found."

While officials in individual nations touched by the bird flu virus trumpet aggressive measures taken to control the pathogen, the number of nations and regions dealing with the virus has continued to grow, with nations in Africa, the Middle East and elsewhere bracing for possible outbreaks among bird populations in the future.

Vocabulary:


 

veterinary: a doctor who practices veterinary medicine(兽医)

pathogen: any disease-producing agent (especially a virus or bacterium or other microorganism)(病菌,病原体)

 
Go to Other Sections
Story Tools
 
Copyright by chinadaily.com.cn. All rights reserved

版权声明:未经中国日报网站许可,任何人不得复制本栏目内容。如需转载请与本网站联系。
None of this material may be used for any commercial or public use. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.