The Asian Age

Thousands of birds culled in HK over avian flu scare

Bird flu scares in the past two years have seen mass culls of up 20,000 birds in Hong Kong

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Hong Kong, June 7: Hong Kong culled 4,500 birds on Tuesday after the deadly H7N9 bird flu virus was discovered in a chicken at a local market. Health officials in white hazmat suits and masks dumped the chickens into green plastic bins at a wholesale poultry market in central Hong Kong Tuesday morning.

The bins were then pumped with carbon dioxide to kill the birds.

Hong Kong is particular­ly alert to the spread of viruses after an outbreak of Severe Acute Respirator­y Syndrome ( SARS) swept through the city in 2003, killing 299 people and infecting around 1,800.

Bird flu scares in the

past two years have seen mass culls of up 20,000 birds in Hong Kong. A spokeswoma­n for the agricultur­e, fisheries and conservati­on department said the latest cull included chickens and pigeons. Trade of live poultry has also been suspended after authoritie­s said Saturday the avian flu virus was found in a fecal sample collected from a chicken at a market in the Tuen Mun, a neighbourh­ood in the west of Hong Kong.

The city’s health minister Ko Wing- man said the city was staying “stringent” against infectious diseases when he announced the cull late Monday.

H7N9 is a particular worry for authoritie­s as it does not kill infected chickens or cause them to develop symptoms, which allows it to spread undetected until contact is made with humans.

The majority of human cases of H7N9 infection have been associated with direct or indirect contact with infected live or dead poultry, according to the World Health Organisati­on.

Human infections from the H7N9 strain were first reported in China in 2013.

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