Pet worries fuel bird flu fears

Alarm over the spread of bird flu grew yesterday after Germany reported a dead cat infected with the virus, while France sought to curb restrictions on its poultry exports. Germany told pet owners to keep their cats indoors and their dogs on a leash in...

Alarm over the spread of bird flu grew yesterday after Germany reported a dead cat infected with the virus, while France sought to curb restrictions on its poultry exports.

Germany told pet owners to keep their cats indoors and their dogs on a leash in areas hit by bird flu after the discovery of the dead cat on a northern island where the H5N1 virus has been identified in wild birds.

The cat grabbed the headlines in several countries in pet-loving Europe, but the World Health Organisation (WHO) said it did not increase the threat to human health from the virus.

"There is no present evidence that domestic cats play a role in the transmission cycle of H5N1 viruses. To date, no human case has been linked to exposure to a diseased cat," it said.

"Unlike the case in domestic and wild birds, there is no evidence that domestic cats are a reservoir of the virus."

Switzerland became the latest European country to confirm an H5N1 outbreak, saying a duck found dead in Geneva last week had the virus.

The Swiss reported a second case of bird flu in a dead swan found close to the German border, although further tests were needed to confirm it was the H5N1 strain.

Bird flu has killed or led to the culling of some 200 million birds since it re-emerged in Asia in late 2003. It remains essentially an animal disease, although people can contract it through close contact with infected birds.

The real fear for human health is that the virus will mutate into a form that passes easily from person to person, sparking a pandemic in which millions could die.

The WHO said yesterday that bird flu was confirmed as the cause of death of an Iraqi man who died in January, taking its official tally for deaths from the virus to 94.

France, Europe's largest poultry producer, last week became the first country in the European Union to report an outbreak of bird flu on a farm.

As many as 43 countries outside the European Union have since banned or restricted French poultry imports, Trade Minister Christine Lagarde said yesterday.

This sharp rise over a matter of days is worrying Paris which is now asking governments to limit the bans to the eastern region of France infected by the deadly strain of bird flu.

The effects of a slump in demand for French poultry are being felt across the Channel in Britain where wholesale prices have fallen by more than 50 per cent in the past week due to a surge in shipments from French firms. Charles Bourns, chairman of the poultry board at Britain's National Farmers' Union, said chicken was now selling for around £0.48 a kilogramme on the wholesale market, down from £1.10 around 10 days ago.

"People are moaning like mad about them (prices)," he said.

The H5N1 virus has been detected in birds in around 20 new countries over the past month alone, crossing into Europe and Africa. The spread is blamed on migratory birds, although some people argue that the poultry trade might play a role.

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