Third bird flu case confirmed in S.Korea
(Reuters) Updated: 2006-12-11 17:29
SEOUL - A third case of bird flu has been discovered in southwestern South
Korea just as officials have completed culling hundreds of thousands of poultry
from two earlier outbreaks.
Last month South Korea confirmed its first
cases of the H5N1 strain in about three years, saying the virus had been found
at two poultry farms close to each other in the North Cholla province.
The fresh case emerged after South Korea completed culling all 760,000
poultry near the two farms, raising concerns that quarantine measures had failed
to control the outbreak.
"The new case could have nothing to do with the
first two cases. We cannot say the virus has spread through the country," said
an official at quarantine authorities who declined to be named.
The
third case was discovered at a quail farm in the same province about 170 km (100
miles) south of Seoul, some 18 km from the original outbreak, according to the
agriculture ministry.
The farm has 290,000 quail and about three
thousand had died over the past four days.
Quarantine authorities would
cull 360,000 poultry within a 500 metre (1,640 ft) radius of the latest infected
farm.
There were no reports to suggest residents or quarantine officials
had been infected in or abound the infected farms, the official said.
The infected three farms lie on a path for migratory birds that head
south from Russia, Mongolia and Kazakhstan and sparked concern that other parts
of South Korea could become infected.
Between December 2003 and March
2004, about 400,000 poultry at South Korean farms were infected by bird flu.
During that outbreak, the country destroyed 5.3 million birds and
subsequent testing in the United States indicated at least nine South Korean
workers involved in the culling had been infected with the H5N1 virus. None
developed major illnesses.
Bird flu remains essentially an animal
disease, but it has infected nearly 260 people worldwide since late 2003,
killing more than 150, according to the World Health Organisation.
Since
2003, outbreaks have been confirmed in about 50 countries and territories.
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