Europe acts to prevent bird flu

Published: 20 August 2005 y., Saturday

Europe is stepping up its defences against bird flu amid fears the virus could spread westwards from Russia. In the Netherlands, all poultry will have to be kept indoors or contained in an enclosure from Monday. The aim is to prevent any contact with migrating wild birds that could be infected.

Germany too is poised to take similar measures. Its Agriculture and Consumer Protection Minister says emergency regulations have been prepared. Renate Kuenast said talks would be held with experts and German federal state governments about if and when they should be put into effect.She added that if she gave authorisation today, the measures would apply tomorrow.

As she spoke Britain was preparing to distribute information packs to doctorsto help them identify cases of bird flu. Veterinary experts from across the European Union are due to discuss the problem next week. Mass bird deaths in a Russian region to the west of the Ural mountains have stoked fears that the virus may be spreading westwards.

From next month, millions of birds will continue their migration to warmer climes ahead of Russia's harsh winter. Although a deadly strain of bird flu has been detected in Russia, no humans there are believed to have caught the virus. In Asia, it has already killed more than 50 people since 2003.

Šaltinis: euronews.net
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Polish Super Ecstasy "UFO" Suspected in at Least 23 Deaths

A powerful version of ecstasy produced in Poland is thought to have been behind the deaths of three people here and at least 20 elsewhere in Europe, police said Wednesday. more »

Bill Gates talks up global health initiatives

Bill Gates gave almost $1.5 billion last year to fight global health threats, including AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis. more »

Second thoughts on sterilization

Many anguished Brazilian women want to reverse procedure more »

Doctors keep work offline

Although US physicians are enthusiastic users of the Web, most are reluctant to practice medicine online. more »

U.K. lays out cell phone safety plans

Government leaflet urges kids to reduce exposure more »

Shuttle pulls away from station

‘Job well done,’ Alpha’s commander tells Endeavour’s crew more »

Salt Sensitivity Increases Heart Disease Death Risk

Researchers Press to Understand Mysterious Phenomenon more »

Study Eyes Brain Use When Listening

Score one for exasperated women: New research suggests men really do listen with just half their brains. more »

EU Commissioner Praises Safety of Disputed Czech Nuclear Plant

The nuclear power plant in Temelin, southern Bohemia, which has been strongly criticized by neighboring Austria and activists from some other countries as "atomic scrap" is much safer than believed originally. more »

Europe’s Beef Scare

The continent is swept by a case of mad-cow dread more »