Two more bird flu epidemic areas were freed from
restrictions Monday following the ending of the isolation of the Dingdang Town,
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, where China's first confirmed bird flu case
was reported.
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 A
worker takes away a police cordon in Yiyuan Village of Nanhui District in
Shanghai. The village was freed of bird flu restrictions February 23, 2004
after a team of experts confirmed the disease had been effectively
controlled. [newsphoto]
| The two areas now
free from the designation are the Nanhui District of Shanghai and Yongkang in
East China's Zhejiang Province, Jia Youling, spokesman for bird flu control with
the Ministry of Agriculture said.
The two areas reported bird flu cases on January 29 and 31, respectively.
The ministry has not received any new reports of new suspected or confirmed
bird flu cases in days.
In another development, the State Administration of Quality Supervision,
Inspection and Quarantine has decided to suspend imports of poultry and related
products from Canada.
On February 19, the health department in Canada reported a suspected H7 bird
flu case at a chicken farm in the western part of the country.
The case in Shanghai was first discovered at a duck farm in Yiyuan village of
Kangqiao town in the Nanhui District.
After 21 days of supervision and emergency countermeasures, an expert team
for bird flu control concluded that the epidemic situation has been "effectively
controlled,'' according to Tang Haidong, vice-magistrate of Nanhui District of
Shanghai.
Poultry raising is forbidden in the district for six months and deals for
live poultry at local markets are not permitted, he said.
Villagers cheered at the lifting of the quarantine.
Ji Yemin, 72, a volunteer disinfection worker, said with a big smile: "I am
very happy that we have gotten back to normal life. For the safe of villagers, I
would like to do this job... my family strongly supports me.''
"I am so glad that nobody in the village was affected with bird flu,'' said
Xu Shengwei, the owner of a duck with bird flu, "I will tell my family in my
hometown of Zhejiang at once that we are very safe and let them rest their
hearts.''
Xu has got the first compensation of 39,000 yuan (US$4,698) and was told to
have more later.
According to Wang Zhengquan, director of the Kangqiao town, the first batch
of compensation payment is 6 million yuan (US$722,890), and all victims in the
village will get funds by the end of this month.
"But we should continue to pay attention to prevention of agricultural
epidemics and avoiding future possible expansions,'' said Feng Zhongwu, an
official with the Ministry of Agriculture.
Meanwhile, local media in South China's Guangdong Province reported that the
isolation of nine epidemic sites in the province will gradually be lifted
starting from this week.
The province experienced the first suspected bird flu cases on January 30 in
the Anchao County and the case was confirmed on February 3.
Since then, bird flu cases were reported in nine areas in the province and a
total of 258,000 birds were slaughtered.
No new cases were reported in the province since February 10, according to
local media.
With the situation turning good, more consumers throughout the country have
gradually started to eat chicken.
Sales of chicken of the Beijing Huadu chicken company in recent days have
been rising and on Sunday sales climbed to 20 tons, according to the Beijing
Morning Post.
Since bird flu was reported in some provinces of China, the sales of chicken
have dropped to two or three tons a day from nearly 100 tons in normal days,
according to Zhang Liangshun, deputy general manager of the Beijing Huadu
chicken company.
The company, largest of its kind in Beijing, had seen its sales revenue slump
by 90 per cent in the worst period of the company's history,Zhang was quoted by
the Beijing Morning Post as saying.
In Guangdong, where chicken is an important dish, it is regaining people's
favour, local media reported.
At the Youlian restaurant in Guangzhou, the capital of Guangdong,the number
of the "Qingping chicken'' sold has risen to 70 per day from 30 per day during
the worst bird flu period.
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