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A worker wears protective clothing as he walks under caution tape at a quarantined farm where they were removing dead turkeys in the southern Israeli community of Sde Moshe, Sunday. (AP)
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Israel confirms deadly bird flu at three locations
By Associated Press  March 20, 2006
 
Israel's Agriculture Ministry confirmed Monday the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu had spread to three locations in the Holy Land, where hundreds of thousands of turkeys and chickens were culled over the weekend.

In a statement on its Web site, the ministry said the flu had been found at the southern communal farms Ein Hashlosha and Holit and in Sdeh Moshe, a farming community in central Israel.

In Ein Hashlosha and Holit, vets have almost completed destroying the flocks where the flu was found, and are now beginning culling flocks in a 3-km radius of the infected area, the ministry statement said.

In Sdeh Moshe and Nachshon - a fourth area suspected of being infected - the vets will complete the culling process later Monday, the ministry said.

"At the moment, we are talking about four infected areas, meaning the situation is under control. Even if additional infected areas are found, it does not mean the flu is spreading," the ministry statement said.

The H5N1 virus has killed or forced the slaughter of tens of millions of chickens and ducks across Asia since 2003, and recently spread to Europe, Africa and the Middle East.

World health officials fear H5N1 could evolve into a virus that would easily be transmitted between people, potentially triggering a global pandemic, though there is no evidence that is happening.

About 100 people have died from the disease worldwide, most after having been directly infected by sick birds.

Israel began culling flocks of infected turkeys on Saturday, even though the virus had not been officially confirmed. Initial tests led the Agriculture Ministry to believe the flu had spread to the area, and the infected farming communities were immediately isolated.

Dafna Varisca, Agriculture Ministry spokeswoman, estimated between 400,000 to 500,000 turkeys and chickens would be killed by drinking poisoned water. Israeli farms raise 200 million turkeys, chickens and other poultry annually, the ministry said.

The European Commission banned the import of Israeli poultry late last week after Israel announced the first signs of an outbreak. The ban includes live poultry, poultry meat, eggs and poultry products, but not heat-treated poultry.

The government will compensate the farmers more than US$3.2 million for their losses, Varisca said. The ministry has also ordered 4 million doses of bird flu vaccine to be used in case it spreads, she added.


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