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Locals Move to Prevent New Outbreaks

While another six previously suspected outbreaks of the deadly H5N1 bird flu in China were confirmed on Friday, governments at various levels take stronger measures to prevent the virus from spreading wider.

Confirmed bird flu cases were spotted in Shilin County and Xishan District of Kunming in Yunnan Province, Southwest China, Luoding and Jiedong County in Guangdong Province of South China.

Meanwhile, suspected cases were also confirmed in Nanhui District of Shanghai and Jinnan District of Tianjin in the north.

The National Bird Flu Reference Laboratory also confirmed the death of several black swans in a wildlife zoo in Shenzhen in Guangdong was caused by bird flu.

All the outbreaks were brought under control in the localities, and no new suspected bird flu cases were reported on Friday, said the ministry.

And some 7,793 people in the bird flu-hit areas, who have had close contact with the sick poultry, have been put under medical supervision and 1,288 blood samples and 591 throat samples have been collected for testing, the Ministry of Health said.

"So far all the reported test results were negative and there are no suspected or confirmed human bird flu infection reports on the Chinese mainland," the ministry said.

In Beijing, the municipal government has adopted effective measures to prevent the import of bird flu virus from other areas to the capital.

Local authorities vowed on Friday that the poultry products sold on the Beijing market are safe to eat.

The message was conveyed at a news conference which was organized by the Information Office of the Beijing municipal government on Friday.

A total of 27 passages in Beijing were designated by local authorities to be where animals and animal products are required to pass through before entering the capital city, said Liu Yaqing, deputy commander-in-chief of the Beijing Municipal Headquarters on Prevention and Cure of Serious Animal Epidemics.

However, Cambodia, Indonesia and Laos continue to report new outbreaks in poultry, the Bangkok-based FAO Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific quoted a FAO statement as saying.

(China Daily February 14, 2004)

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