SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Henry Niman who wrote (698739)8/31/2005 11:46:40 AM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Respond to of 769670
 
I believe you are certainly correct that they may soon be large demands put upon their suppliers:

August 31, 2005
U.N. Agency: Bird Flu Likely to Spread
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
nytimes.com
Filed at 10:54 a.m. ET

ROME (AP) -- The bird flu virus that has hit several countries in Asia is likely to spread to Europe, the Middle East, south Asia and Africa, a U.N. food agency warned Wednesday, urging nations at risk to increase surveillance and prepare national emergency plans.

The Food and Agriculture Organization said the virus is likely to be carried over long distances by wild water birds.

Birds flying from Siberia, where the virus has recently spread, may carry the disease to the Caspian and Black Seas ''in the foreseeable future,'' the Rome-based agency said.

''These regions and countries in the Balkans could become a potential gateway to central Europe for the virus,'' the FAO said in a statement.

FAO said bird migration routes also run across Azerbaijan, Iran, Iraq, Georgia, Ukraine and some Mediterranean countries and said bird flu outbreaks in these areas were possible.

It said India and Bangladesh, which currently seem to be uninfected, are also considered to be ''at risk.''

''Bangladesh, and to a lesser extent India, harbor large numbers of domestic ducks and are situated along one of the major migratory routes. They have the potential to become new large endemic areas of bird flu infection,'' the FAO warned.

The H5N1 bird flu strain has killed almost 60 people in Asia, but it does not spread easily among humans -- a situation experts fear could change if the virus mutates, leading to a dangerous pandemic.

In Russia, the outbreak has killed about 11,000 birds and prompted officials to slaughter 127,000 others to halt the virus' spread. No human cases have been registered there.

Experts say they are concerned by the situation, but have also expressed optimism that European countries could stamp out bird flu before the virus takes hold and spreads among people.

Many experts said the virus would be detected more quickly in Europe than in Asia, and noted that people don't live in close quarters with animals, as they do in much of southeast Asia. The European poultry industry also is better equipped to shelter its birds from contact with the wild ducks blamed for the disease's spread, experts said.

However, FAO's chief veterinary officer, Joseph Domenech, expressed concerns that ''poor countries in southeast Europe, where wild birds from Asia mingle with others from northern Europe, may lack the capacity to detect and deal with outbreaks of bird flu.''

In the statement, FAO also warned that ''as long as the H5N1 virus circulates in poultry, humans continue to be at risk.''

The agency said countries at risk, especially those along the routes of migrating birds, should step up surveillance of domestic poultry and wild birds, as well as ready emergency plans. It said affected countries should battle the bird flu virus at its origin, in poultry.

''Close contacts between humans, domestic poultry and wildlife should be reduced and closely monitored. On farms and in markets, domestic birds should be strictly separated from wild animals to the greatest extent possible,'' said the agency. ''Vaccinating poultry could also be considered in at-risk situations.''

* Copyright 2005 The Associated Press