Hong Kong authorities announced Tuesday that the number of live
chickens imported from the Chinese mainland will be increased to
50,000 a day during the public holidays coming in late May.
Live chicken imports from the mainland would be temporarily
increased to 50,000 per day for the three days preceding the
traditional Tuen Ng Festival, or Dragon Boat Festival, from May
28to 30 to meet expected surging demand, said a spokesman for Hong
Kong's Health, Welfare and Food Bureau.
The present arrangement was made only after local poultry
industry promised to strictly observe public health conditions and
clear overstocking of live chickens in the retail outlets during
the three-day period, said the spokesman.
"The decision was made after assessing the relevant risk in the
light of the prevailing threat of an avian influenza outbreak and
communicating with the relevant mainland authorities," said the
spokesman.
Except a few dead wild birds were found with H5N1 virus, Hong
Kong has no outbreak of bird flu, nor report of human infection
cases.
The government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region
(HKSAR), however, has vowed to keep the city's daily live chicken
population under 2 million so as to cut down the risk of an
outbreak.
To achieve the goal, the HKSAR government capped daily imports
at 20,000 live chickens a day, culled backyard-raised chicken and
cut down rental licenses issued for local poultry retailing
market.
Despite the poultry industry's call for a larger number of
imported chickens, the government insisted the imports ceiling will
keep unchanged so as to better manage the prevention and
surveillance system against bird flu outbreak.
As for the day of Tuen Ng Festival that will fall on May 31, the
number of chickens to be imported will be resumed to 20,000.
(Xinhua News Agency April 26, 2006)