. Earth Science News .
China Reports Two New Bird Flu Outbreaks


Beijing (AFP) Nov 20, 2005
China said Sunday deadly bird flu had been detected in two new locations, bringing the total number of confirmed outbreaks in the country over the past month to 17.

One outbreak struck a poultry farm in north China's Inner Mongolia region and another hit a geese farm in central China's Hubei province, the Ministry of Agriculture said in a statement on its website.

In the Inner Mongolia outbreak, 176 poultry were discovered dead on a farm in Hanguerhe town, in the Molidawada minority area, on November 15, with the disease confirmed by a national laboratory Sunday, the ministry said.

On November 16, 3,500 geese died at a farm in the Tianezhou economic development district in Hubei's Shishou city, according to the ministry. The outbreak was also confirmed as bird flu Sunday.

Local authorities are culling all poultry within a radius of three kilometers (1.9 miles) of each outbreak, with 3,202 birds destroyed in Inner Mongolia and 3,800 in Hubei so far.

The news came four days after China announced its first confirmed human fatality from avian influenza, a 24-year-old peasant woman from central Anhui province.

A 12-year-old girl from Hunan province in the center of the country was also considered a possible bird flu fatality, according to local health authorities, but unreliable sample testing made confirmation impossible.

China had previously reported over the past month 15 other outbreaks across a wide swathe of the country.

earlier related report
China Tightens Rules On Animal Epidemics Amid New Bird Flu Outbreaks
Beijing (AFP) Nov 20 - China issued strict new rules on reporting animal epidemics Sunday as it said deadly bird flu had been detected in two new locations, bringing the total number of confirmed outbreaks in the country over the past month to 17.

Under the new rules, provincial governments should report major animal epidemics to the State Council, China's cabinet, within four hours of discovering them, Xinhua news agency said, quoting a new State Council regulation.

County and city governments are also required to report cases to provincial authorities within two hours. Officials who neglected their duty would be removed and could be prosecuted, it said.

The regulation is aimed at "controlling and stamping out major animal epidemic cases as soon as possible, ensuring the safety of breeding industry, protecting people's health and lives and safeguarding the normal social order," the regulation said.

One of the new outbreaks struck a poultry farm in north China's Inner Mongolia region and another hit a geese farm in central China's Hubei province, the Ministry of Agriculture said in a statement on its website.

In the Inner Mongolia outbreak, 176 poultry were discovered dead on a farm in Hanguerhe town, in the Molidawada minority area, on November 15, with the disease confirmed by a national laboratory Sunday, the ministry said.

On November 16, 3,500 geese died at a farm in the Tianezhou economic development district in Hubei's Shishou city, according to the ministry. The outbreak was also confirmed as bird flu Sunday.

Local authorities are culling all poultry within a radius of three kilometers (1.9 miles) of each outbreak, with 3,202 birds destroyed in Inner Mongolia and 3,800 in Hubei so far.

The news came four days after China announced its first confirmed human fatality from avian influenza, a 24-year-old peasant woman from central Anhui province.

A 12-year-old girl from Hunan province in the center of the country was also considered a possible bird flu fatality, according to local health authorities, but unreliable sample testing made confirmation impossible.

China had previously reported over the past month 15 other outbreaks across a wide swathe of the country.

Related Links
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express

Experts Fear Africa Flu Pandemic
New York (UPI) Nov 18, 2005
Indications that avian influenza may soon take root in Africa are of grave concern to health experts.







  • Focus On Levee Breaks
  • Indonesia's Tsunami Early Warning System In Place: Officials
  • UK Agency Joins International 'Space and Major Disasters' Group
  • Aid Groups Issue Emergency Appeal As Winter Descends On Kashmir Quake Victims

  • Blair Calls For More Multilateral Action To Stop Global Warming
  • Global Warming Producing 150,000 Deaths Annually: WHO
  • Rapid Warming Caused Vegetation Changes
  • Southern Ocean Search For Climate Futures

  • NPOESS $3Bn Over Budget, Three Years Delayed
  • Envisat Radar Protecting Patagonian Toothfish From Pirate Fishermen
  • First Remote Sensing Satellite To Be Launched In Late 2006
  • Deforestation Rate 'Alarming', But Net Loss Slowing: FAO

  • Analysis: Putin As Energy Czar
  • China, Japan Vie For African Oil
  • Biorenewables - Products For A Sustainable Future: York Leads The Way
  • Workshop to Help Gauge Nation's Energy and Water Concerns

  • China Reports Two New Bird Flu Outbreaks
  • Experts Fear Africa Flu Pandemic
  • Broad Stockpiling Advised For Pandemic
  • Bird Flu Crisis Escalating In China

  • Scientists Map One of Biology's Critical Light-Sensing Structures
  • Outrage Forces Review Of Exotic Animal Meat Buffet
  • New Research Shows Aussie Lizards Are Poisonous Too
  • China Has Record 25 Pandas Born Through Artificial Insemination

  • Polluted River Water In China Poisons 34 People
  • Nano World: Nano-Sponges For Toxic Metals
  • Thick Smog over Beijing, China
  • Health Warning As Beijing Pollution Hits Worst Level

  • One, Two, Threes not A, B, Cs
  • California Scientists Double Volume Of Data In NIH Biotech Repository
  • Flipped Genetic Sequences Illuminate Human Evolution And Disease
  • Color Perception Is Not In The Eye Of The Beholder: It's In The Brain

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement