Philippine Daily Inquirer

For bird flu claim, show chicken feet

- —STORY BY TONETTE OREJAS

SAN LUIS, PAMPANGA— Save the feet, Agricultur­e Secretary Emmanuel Piñol advised poultry farmers on Tuesday, saying this was the only way they could get reimbursed for the chickens, quails and ducks gassed in a government effort to prevent the spread of bird flu. “Those are your evidence when you claim compensati­on,” he said.

SAN LUIS, PAMPANGA— Poultry raisers can get reimbursed for their losses if they show the feet of chickens, quails and ducks gassed in a government effort to prevent the spread of bird flu.

The government will need the feet as “proof of compensati­on,” Agricultur­e Secretary Manny Piñol said on Tuesday during a visit to the town he placed under quarantine following the avian flu outbreak last week.

“Save those pairs of feet. Those are your evidence when you claim compensati­on for your culled birds,” Piñol told some 100 traders at a forum here.

Pampanga Vice Gov. Dennis Pineda has formed a team to make an inventory, validate and certify the destroyed birds.

The Bureau of Animal Industry (BAI) has condemned 131,500 to 200,000 birds on 13 farms in Barangays San Carlos and Sta. Rita in San Luis that are enclosed by a 1-kilometer quarantine zone.

The birds exposed to avian flu would be placed in sacks, gassed with carbon dioxide and buried in pits. Four laboratori­es tested several samples of the birds and concluded these were positive for the H5 strain.

Culling period extended

The initial three-day culling was supposed to end on Monday, but the BAI extended the process for another five to six days.

Farmswithi­n the 7-km control area covering the rest of San Luis, Mexico, San Simon and Sta. Ana towns have agreed to surveillan­ce and the voluntary culling of their stocks as a precaution.

After reporting the outbreak on Friday and setting up the quarantine, Piñol announced a package of compensati­on and assistance.

He said affected poultry farms would be entitled to P80 for each egg-producing chicken and duck as well as each broiler, or bird fattened for meat, that the government was forced to destroy. Farmers would get P10 for each destroyed quail.

The budget for compensati­ng damages was initially set at P16 million covering the 1-km quarantine zone and P52.8 million for farms within a 7-km control zone.

The government will also give P5,000 to traders and displaced employees and a loan of P20,000 without interest and collateral and payable in three years through a rural bank in San Luis.

Loan window

Piñol said he would put up another loan window that would offer less than 6 percent interest.

“I want to be on the safe side. I don’t mind if I spend P100 million to contain this problem. I’m willing to do it. The moment this spreads, this is going to be a big problem to the Philippine­s,” he said. “This is a nightmare as far as I am concerned.”

The source of the virus is still being investigat­ed. The Department of Agricultur­e has requested parallel tests by a laboratory in Australia to check the presence of the H5N1 strain, which is harmful to humans.

“Our focus is to clean ground zero,” Piñol said. To regain the avian flu-free status of the Philippine­s, he said he ordered random testing in poultry farms, organized biosecurit­y teams and directed the procuremen­t of sprayers for disinfecti­on.

He has also authorized incinerati­on for those who could not find burial pits.

As of Tuesday, 50,000 chickens had been culled in the 1-km zone. Infected chickens that were buried in a fishpond had started to float, emitting foul odor in the village.

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