Deadly H5N1 virus confirmed in chickens in Japan

January 22, 2011TOKYO — Japan has began slaughtering some 10,000 chickens at a poultry farm in western Miyazaki prefecture in a bid to contain an outbreak of bird flu, according to the local government. Officials in the prefecture, 900 kilometres (560 miles) southwest of Tokyo, said 36 chickens were found dead on Friday at the poultry farm. Preliminary tests confirmed that six of the birds had died of the H5 subtype of the avian flu virus, the officials said. In an effort to prevent a larger outbreak, the local government decided to slaughter all the chickens at the farm while setting up 20 checkpoints for disinfection and banned any movement of chickens within 10 kilometres. It was the first bird flu outbreak since 2007 in Miyazaki, where a foot-and-mouth outbreak also forced the slaughter of almost 300,000 farm animals last year. In Tokyo, Prime Minister Naoto Kan set up a task force Saturday morning to “promptly” introduce necessary measures to contain the bird flu outbreak, officials said. –AFP
Hong Kong – A Large-billed crow and an Oriental magpie robin were both recently found dead in Hong Kong. Lab results from tests on the dead birds confirmed both birds died from progressive stages of the deadly H5N1 avian flu virus.  –7th Space  
*See chapter 15 in the Extinction Protocol on Pestilence threat
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