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Pastimes : The Naked Truth - Big Kahuna a Myth -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Don Pueblo who wrote (536)12/29/1997 3:05:00 PM
From: MythMan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 86076
 
TLC, not bad.. If I were a voter in Mohan's poll, I'd give you the nod. btw, looks like its all over in HK. my condolences to any lost loved ones <g>

Poultry slaughtered in Hong Kong in
hopes of wiping out mystery flu

By KATHY WILHELM
The Associated Press
12/29/97 2:11 PM Eastern

HONG KONG (AP) -- Wearing protective cotton face masks and gloves,
government workers supervised a slaughter of Hong Kong's entire chicken
population in an attempt to prevent new cases of a mysterious flu that has killed
four people.

Scenes of massive slaughter, followed by scrubbing and disinfecting, were
played out at hundreds of poultry markets and farms.

In the markets, government workers in white surgical masks and gloves moved
down aisles holding clipboards, keeping count as barefaced and barehanded
vendors calmly pulled birds from cages and drew their knives quickly across the
necks.

The teams threw the carcasses in plastic garbage bags, tossed in cupfuls of lime,
then sealed the bags in trash bins for transportation to government-run landfills.

On farms, government teams placed chickens into garbage bags and piped
carbon dioxide into the bags through hoses.

By evening, hundreds of bags of carcasses had been trucked to government
landfills. Officials expected to kill about 1.2 million chickens, along with
uncounted ducks, geese, quail and other poultry.

The government ordered the slaughter after discovering the influenza virus A
H5N1 among chickens on a farm. The virus has long been known to infect
birds, but it jumped to humans for the first time this year.

As of Monday, 13 people were confirmed as having the flu, including the four
who died and six who recovered fully. Seven others were suspected of having
the flu, including two who recovered.

Experts do not know whether humans can get the virus from each other or just
from birds. Another question is whether the virus is primarily airborne or if it can
be contracted by handling bird droppings. There is no vaccine.

Not everyone exposed to the virus falls ill, however. At least nine people
developed antibodies to the flu without having marked flu symptoms. No
poultry workers are known to have been sickened.

Vendors "will not be allowed to sell any poultry until the poultry are confirmed
to be safe," Chow Loi, an environmental health official, said as he supervised
the slaughter at Hung Hom Market.

"This is one of the ways to prevent the spread of the disease, to get rid of the
source," he said.

However, critics said that could not be assured because the source of the virus
remains unknown.

"Until we know the answer, the killing of more than a million birds cannot hope
to quell the public's understandable fears," the English-language South China
Morning Post wrote Monday in an unusual front-page editorial.

It said all chickens entering Hong Kong also will have to be certified as safe.

About 80 percent of Hong Kong's poultry supply comes from mainland China,
and Hong Kong officials believe at least some infected chickens came from
China.

China halted poultry shipments to Hong Kong last week for an indefinite period
but insists none of its chickens are infected, raising questions about the
effectiveness of its surveillance.

Martin Lee, chairman of the Democratic Party and an outspoken critic of China,
accused the Hong Kong government Monday of moving too slowly to clean up
the chicken supply out of subservience to Beijing. He said it was obvious that
China was the likely source, and that Hong Kong should have halted the
chicken shipments on its own.

South Korea disclosed that it has been testing poultry imported from China for
the past 10 days, but has not found any cases of infection. The Philippine
government also has expressed concern about the virus spreading.

Consumption of chickens, formerly Hong Kong's most popular meat, had fallen
so sharply in recent weeks that most vendors and farmers welcomed the
slaughter, saying they were losing money by keeping the birds alive.

The government prepared emergency legislation that would compensate owners
by $3.85 per bird. Some owners said this was not enough.

Restaurants specializing in chicken dishes also said business was down, despite
doctors' assurances that cooked chicken is safe. Some said they planned to
close for a few days, while others said they were buying frozen chicken from the
United States.

Chicken prices in the Chinese province closest to Hong Kong also have fallen
because of the lost sales to Hong Kong, according to a mainland newspaper,
the China Daily.

The World Health Organization has said that the small number of people
sickened makes it unnecessary to issue any travel advisory for Hong Kong.



To: Don Pueblo who wrote (536)12/29/1997 4:19:00 PM
From: MythMan  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 86076
 
TLC quote: "I am not a crook"

But other chicksh*ts are <g>

cnnfn.com