Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Delhi allows poultry trade after samples test negative

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Bird flu has not spread among chickens in Delhi, an official said on Thursday after all the 100 samples taken from Asia’s largest poultry market in Ghazipur tested negative.

The results come a day after civic authoritie­s imposed a temporary ban on sale and storage of poultry or processed chicken meat in view of the bird flu situation here.

Earlier, samples taken from crows and ducks at parks and lakes in the national capital tested positive for the avian influenza.

This had prompted the Delhi government on Monday to ban the sale of processed and packaged chicken brought from outside the city and shutting the wholesale poultry market in east Delhi for 10 days as a precaution­ary measure.

The Ghazipur market located on the Delhi-Uttar Pradesh border is a key supplier of poultry products in the region. Chickens, geese, ducks and turkeys are among the poultry birds bred by farmers for their eggs and meat.

“Test results of 104 samples arrived on Wednesday evening. Of these, 100 samples were collected from 35 poultry birds in the Ghazipur market. All samples have tested negative for bird flu,” the Delhi animal husbandry unit’s senior official Rakesh Singh said.

“It means there is no spread of avian influenza in poultry birds in Delhi,” he said.

However, bird flu is suspected in the remaining four samples of heron taken from Hastsal Park, Singh said, adding that these samples have been sent from a Jalandhar-based lab to Bhopal for confirmati­on.

The official said that around 850 bird deaths have been reported from various parts of the city since January 6.

The situation is being monitored strictly and samples are being collected regularly, he said.

Officials had earlier said that 10 samples from three areas -Mayur Vihar Phase 3, Sanjay Lake and Dwarka Sector 9 -tested positive for the avian influenza.

A drive to cull ducks was conducted on Monday at the famous Sanjay Lake, where several of these birds were found dead.

Authoritie­s had on Saturday closed three recreation­al parks at Hauz Khas, Dwarka Sector 9 and Hastsal and Sanjay Lake as a precaution­ary measure.

The three municipal corporatio­ns of the city had on Wednesday warned establishm­ents such as restaurant­s and shops of strict action, including cancellati­on of their licence, if they fail to comply with the ban on meat.

 ?? PTI ?? Ghazipur poultry market wears a deserted look after authoritie­s closed it for ten days due to the bird flu in New Delhi.
PTI Ghazipur poultry market wears a deserted look after authoritie­s closed it for ten days due to the bird flu in New Delhi.

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