Russia bracing for bird flu outbreak

Published: 22 January 2006 y., Sunday

Vladimir Putin, the Russian president, has asked his government to take measures to prevent a new outbreak of bird flu following the death of three children from the virus in near neighbour Turkey.
Gennady Onishchenko, Russia's chief state epidemiologist, has told Putin that Russian doctors at airports and railway stations have started examining people arriving from Turkey. 

Onishchenko was quoted on Sunday as advising Russians to avoid travelling to Turkey. Russia has been battling with bird flu in poultry since July, culling more than 600,000 domestic fowl. The virus has been confined in eight Russian regions from Siberia to European Russia. But no case of human infection has so far been registered in Russia. 

By the end of December, quarantine had been lifted from all but two locations, one in Astrakhan region and the other in Kalmykia, both located on the Caspian Sea.

Šaltinis: english.aljazeera.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

Used clothing imports hit by foot-and-mouth

The Baltic states are strengthening measures to protect their countries from foot-and-mouth disease. more »

Affordable medicine sought for the poor

It's a problem international experts will address at a workshop starting Monday in Norway. more »

EU's decision

Ministry Shocked by EU Assumption of BSE in Hungary more »

EU rejects virus vaccination plan

The UK will expand its cull despite struggling to destroy piles of carcasses more »

Human Cloning: Cause for Rejoicing or Despair?

A groups of rebel scientists gathered in Rome to announce their controversial — and highly experimental — project. more »

Surge in foot-and-mouth cases

Foot-and-mouth disease has continued its seemingly relentless spread with a flood of new UK cases confirmed amid fears Europe may be infected. more »

Evidence of the oldest life

Mars Meteorite May Show Old Life more »

The blue lights

A major oil company in the Baltic states says it is installing blue lights in its gas station toilettes to dissuade growing numbers of drug addicts from using the facilities to inject narcotics. more »

Poland Testing Cattle for Mad Cow Disease

Poland's veterinary service has begun testing cattle for bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), or mad cow disease, using tests imported from Switzerland, its director said on Thursday. more »

A deadly Soviet threat lives on

In a Kazakh institute,living germs designed for warfare are a ‘terrorist’s treasure’ more »