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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
H5N1 Found in Russia
2005-07-29
Dangerous Bird Flu Strain Found in Russia
By JIM HEINTZ
The Associated Press
Friday, July 29, 2005; 11:58 AM

MOSCOW -- Investigators have determined that a strain of bird flu virus infecting fowl in Russia is the type that can infect humans, the Agriculture Ministry said Friday.

The virus caused the deaths of hundreds of birds in a section of Siberia this month, but no human infections have been reported.

In a brief statement, the ministry identified the virus as avian flu type A H5N1.

"That raises the need for undertaking quarantine measures of the widest scope," the statement said. Ministry officials could not immediately be reached for elaboration.

Strains of bird flu have been hitting flocks throughout Asia and some fatal human cases have been reported there.

Since 2003, bird flu has killed at least 57 people in Vietnam, Thailand, Cambodia and Indonesia, which reported its first three human deaths this month.

The outbreak in Russia's Novosibirsk region apparently started about two weeks ago when large numbers of chicken, geese, ducks and turkeys began dying. Officials say that all dead or infected birds were incinerated. But it is unclear whether that would effectively stop the virus from spreading.

Earlier this week, Russia's chief government epidemiologist, Gennady Onishchenko, said the virus' appearance in Russia could be due to migrating birds that rest on the Siberian region's lakes.

A recent report released by the journal Science said the finding of the H5N1 infection in migrant birds at Qinghai Lake in western China "indicates that this virus has the potential to be a global threat."

The reports echo concerns voiced by the World Health Organization, which urged China to step up its testing of wild geese and gulls. A WHO official estimated that the flu had killed more than 5,000 wild birds in western China.

The outbreak was first detected about two months ago in bar-headed geese at China's remote saltwater lake, which is a key breeding location for migratory birds that overwinter in southeast Asia, Tibet and India. The virus has hit that species the hardest, but also affects brown-headed gulls and great black-headed gulls.

Dick Thompson, a spokesman for the World Health Organization, in Geneva, said, "We would hope that these samples would be sent to a WHO international reference lab outside the country. This is standard for verification."

"To confirm that it is H5N1, it is important that these tests are done outside the country," he said.
Posted by:.com

#3  This what you be concerned about - China deploys 50,000 to fight pig illness. The Chinese are blaming a bacteria, but its almost certainly viral. What we don't know is the extent of H2H transmission.
Posted by: phil_b   2005-07-29 16:43  

#2  LOL! The legendary Snit Dragon of Rosy Dawn?
Posted by: Shipman   2005-07-29 15:46  

#1  hehe and i was think of some Japanese 2 WWar plane.
Posted by: Hupomoque Spoluter7949   2005-07-29 15:32  

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