*Plagues, Pestilences and Diseases
Three Cases Of H5N1 Bird Flu Confirmed In Germany*
Germany battled a bird flu epidemic last year. It broke out on the
Baltic Sea island of Ruegen and spread to six of the country's 16 states.
Berlin (AFP) Jun 24, 2007
Three wild birds in Germany have died of the feared H5N1 strain of bird
flu, a health official in Nuremberg in southern Germany said on Sunday.
Katja Guenther told AFP tests carried out by the Friedrich Loeffler
Institute confirmed that two swans and a duck suffered from the H5N1
strain of the virus. She said tests were being conducted on another
seven birds who died of bird flue to see whether they too had been
carriers of H5N1, which is potentially lethal for humans.
The dead wild birds who were infected with the virus were found near
Nuremberg in the past week.
Guenther said local authorities had cordoned off an area with a
four-kilometre (2.5-mile) radius from the place where the sick birds
were found.
Nobody will be allowed to bring birds into the area or take them from
there for the next three weeks, and poultry in the area must be kept
indoors for the same period.
H5N1 was found on a poultry farm in the Czech Republic last week,
prompting the slaughter of some 6,000 turkeys.
Germany battled a bird flu epidemic last year. It broke out on the
Baltic Sea island of Ruegen and spread to six of the country's 16 states.
The disease spread to mammals, killing a cat and a stone marten, but did
not affect humans.
Source: Agence France-Presse