Intellasia.net
 
 
 Services  Tenders BizFind Jobs Archive Search Contact  Tiếng Việt
Updated: 3 Jan, 2010 - 1:44:04 PM (GMT+7:00) RSS feed to Intellasia Vietnam News RSS Feed  Video Feeds
Intellasia News Online  
Email this article Send to a friend     Printer friendly page Printer friendly             « back
 
  Stocks & Securities
 
  Business
 
  Finance
 
  Economy
 
  Property
 
  Resources
 
  Infrastructure
 
  Info-tech
 
  Agriculture
 
  Governance
 
  Legal News
 
  Society
  Health
 
  Regional
 
 
Japan finds H5 virus in swans, India, Vietnam cite outbreaks
30-APR-2008 Intellasia | CIDRAP News
30 Apr, 2008 - 7:00:00 AM
Animal health officials in Japan were awaiting final tests on four wild swans that recently tested positive for an H5 strain of avian influenza, as authorities in Vietnam and India's Tripura state moved to quash new outbreaks caused by the highly pathogenic H5N1 virus.

Three of the swans were found dead on the shores of Lake Towada in Akita prefecture, in northern Japan, on April 21, officials said in a news release, according to a report today from Reuters. The swans were found and tested during heightened surveillance prompted by several outbreaks in South Korea, Japan's neighbour to the southwest.

Authorities have not found any mass bird deaths nearby and said there were no chicken farms within 10 kilometres of the area, Reuters reported.

Japan's last reported H5N1 outbreaks occurred in early 2007, when the virus struck farms in four towns in the southern part of the country and killed a hawk eagle near Kumamoto prefecture, according to reports from the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE).

Elsewhere, veterinary officials in India said on April 26 that samples from more birds in Tripura state had tested positive for the H5N1 virus, pushing to three the number of areas hit in the state in the past 2 weeks, the Times of India reported on April 26.

Asim Roy Barman, state animal resources department director, told the Times that the two earlier outbreak sites were within 4 kilometres of the border with Bangladesh, which has had extensive H5N1 outbreaks over the past several months. However, he said the latest outbreak was a surprise to officials because it is 50 kilometres from the Bangladesh border.

In early April, Tripura became the second Indian state to report H5N1 outbreaks this year. Nearly all of Tripura state, located in the far northeastern section of India, borders eastern Bangladesh.

In other developments, animal health officials in Vietnam said the H5N1 virus has been detected in another province, Son La in the northern part of the country, the Chinese news agency Xinhua reported today.

The report said Vietnam's Department of Animal Health told a local newspaper that the outbreak occurred among chickens and ducks in a backyard poultry flock. Provincial authorities have isolated the site and disinfected the farm to prevent the spread of the virus, according to the report.

The animal health department, according to Xinhua, said two other locations in Vietnam are also battling the H5N1 virus: Tien Giang province in the south and Can Tho, an independent municipality that is the largest city in the Mekong Delta.






    © Copyright 2009 by Intellasia.net

    Top of Page


 
Korea reports foot-and-mouth outbreak
China offers free swine flu jabs to children under 3
Japan opens doors to foreign healthcare workers
Indonesia reports 15 new bird flu deaths in 2009
China fights growing problem of tuberculosis
Vietnam Banking and Finance
Advertising
 
Intellasia News Services
© 2009 All Rights Reserved
privacy policy : terms of use : contact