The European Union on Tuesday offered to help Indonesia fight bird flu,
saying the world's fourth most populous nation needed assistance even though it
had a plan and the political will to tackle the deadly virus.
Visiting EU Commissioner for Health and Consumer Protection, Markos
Kyprianou, said help could take the form of surveillance as well as the
vaccination and culling of chickens.
Indonesia has had five confirmed human deaths from the H5N1 strain of bird
flu. Local tests have shown two others have died, although those results have
yet to be confirmed by a Hong Kong laboratory affiliated with the World Health
Organisation.
"Indonesia has a plan and political will to handle its avian flu problem, but
of course under the circumstances Indonesia needs international support. That is
why we're here," Kyprianou said after meeting Agriculture Minister Anton
Apriyantono.
"The more effective (we are) in dealing with the problem at its source, the
better we protect humans."
The highly pathogenic H5N1 strain is endemic in poultry in parts of Asia,
where it is known to have killed 64 people. Most human bird flu cases have been
blamed on direct or indirect contact with infected chickens.
But experts fear H5N1 could mutate into a form that passes easily among
people, just like human influenza. If it does, millions could die because they
would have no immunity.
Kyprianou gave no details on assistance the EU might provide, but the
Rome-based U.N. Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) has sent an emergency
team to Indonesia that will spearhead the testing of backyard chickens for bird
flu across the main island of Java.
Those teams hope to start work at the end of the month, the FAO has said. The
FAO has said there were about 200 million chickens being raised by 30 million
households in Indonesia.
In many parts of Asia, poultry live side-by-side people, increasing the
chances of humans becoming infected by bird flu and making control measures much
harder to implement.
Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has made fighting bird flu one
of the government's top priorities. The H5N1 virus has been found in 23 out of
33 provinces.
On Monday, he outlined measures to tackle the virus that included seeking
licences to make anti-viral drugs as well as reviewing the budget to see if more
funds could be allocated.
But the government has largely resisted calls for a mass cull of chickens,
saying it did not have the money to compensate owners.
Apriyantono said his ministry would conduct a mass slaughter when newly
infected areas were detected and selective culling and vaccinations where the
H5N1 virus was endemic in poultry.
He said teams of volunteers, soldiers and students would fan out to test
backyard chickens for bird flu next month.
"The challenge is we need a great workforce and this should be well organised
because this operation will be door-to-door," he said, without saying if this
was part of the FAO plan.
The H5N1 virus has also been found in birds in eastern Europe and there are
fears migrating flocks could take it to the Middle East and
Africa.