AGRICULTURE
REPORT - Bird Flu Update
By Mario Ritter
This is Steve Ember with the VOA Special English Agriculture Report.
Chicken farmers in the northeastern United States
are dealing with a form of bird flu different from the virus in Asia.
Officials say it is the form H7. The H7 virus does not have a history
of infecting people. But it does kill chickens, and it spreads easily.
The virus was first discovered on a farm in Delaware
that provided live chickens to a market in New York City. States officials
ordered that farm and another one to destroy thousands of chickens.
Officials also banned the sales of live chickens. After Delaware, cases
were reported in New Jersey and Pennsylvania.
The United States is the biggest producer and exporter
of chicken. The American share of the export market in two-thousand-one
was valued at nearly two-thousand-million dollars. That year, eighteen-percent
of all American chicken production was exported.
Because of the H7 outbreak, a number of nations have
barred imports of American chicken. Some including Russia barred imports
only from the affected areas. Russia is the biggest importer of American
chicken products.
Others ordered bans on chicken from anywhere in the
United States. These countries included China, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore
and South Korea. The United States Agriculture Department says it does
not believe the import bans will last long.
In Asia, officials have been working to control the
spread of the avian influenza virus known as H5N1. That virus has killed
millions of chickens in several countries. The number of human deaths
reached twenty last week in Vietnam and Thailand.
The bird flu outbreak in Asia has caused economic
damage. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization says it
will aid some of the countries affected. The FAO said it would provide
one-point-six million dollars to Cambodia, Laos, Pakistan and Vietnam.
The agency also joined the World Health Organization
in urging measures to fight bird flu. One of these measures is the use
of vaccine medicine to help chickens resist the virus.
Scientists are developing a human vaccine in case
the virus takes a form that spreads easily from person to person. Some
people have worried that pigs may also become infected and give the
virus to humans. However, the Food and Agriculture Organization says
it has found no evidence that the H5N1 virus can infect pigs.
This VOA Special English Agriculture Report was written
by Mario Ritter. This is Steve Ember.
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