Bird flu detected in Hong Kong market

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Pastor Dale Morgan

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Jun 7, 2008, 7:57:54 PM6/7/08
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*Plagues, Pestilences and Diseases

Bird flu detected in Hong Kong market*

By DIKKY SINN
The Associated Press
Saturday, June 7, 2008; 6:47 AM

HONG KONG -- Hong Kong health workers slaughtered 2,700 poultry in a
market Saturday after chickens were found to be carrying the dangerous
H5N1 bird flu virus, officials said.

The slaughter may be extended to all live poultry in the territory if
the virus is detected in any other locations, Secretary for Food and
Health York Chow said.

"Since we have detected the virus in the market, we will cull all the
chickens in this market," Chow told reporters. "If we find another
positive detection in another market, then we will assume that the risk
is much higher and we need to cull all the chickens in all the markets."

Hong Kong TV Cable showed health workers wearing protective gear placing
live poultry from nine stalls into bags to prepare for the slaughter.

Routine bird flu checks detected the H5N1 virus in five samples of
chicken waste. The samples were collected June 3 from three vendors in
the market in the Sham Shui Po residential district, Chow said.

Health officials declared the market an infected area and suspended all
sales of live poultry there, a government statement said.

Chow said authorities were tracing the origin of the infected chickens.

Chow also ordered a 21-day ban on the supply of live poultry from
mainland China and from local farms.

Occasional H5N1 infections in wild birds are common in Hong Kong but the
territory has not suffered a major outbreak of the disease since the
virus killed six people in 1997.

That prompted the government to slaughter the territory's entire poultry
population of about 1.5 million birds.

At least 241 people have died of bird flu worldwide since 2003,
according to the World Health Organization.

Most human cases have been linked to contact with infected birds, but
health experts worry the virus could mutate into a form that passes
easily among humans, sparking a pandemic that might kill millions of people.

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