ANKARA,
October 9, 2005 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - Turkey culled
about 1,500 chickens and turkeys overnight to prevent the spread of
avian flu after reporting its first outbreak of the disease on a farm
near the Aegean Sea, NTV private television said on Sunday, October 9.
The
authorities have also imposed a 3 km (2 miles) quarantine zone around
the affected farm, where nearly 2,000 turkeys died of the globally
feared disease, Reuters reported.
"At
the moment this is not a situation which should cause (ordinary
citizens) any worry. At the moment, there is no question of having
household pets put down," the state Anatolian news agency quoted
local official Resul Celik as saying.
"What
matters for us is the farm where the outbreak occurred and the 3 km
quarantine area," he said.
The
affected district of Kiziksa will remain under quarantine for 21 days,
newspapers said. Stray dogs in the area are being killed as a
precaution.
The
birds were buried in lime-drenched pits, and the culling will resume
on Sunday evening, the Turkish agency said.
Hurriyet
newspaper quoted Mehmet Eksen, owner of the stricken Turkish farm, as
saying he now feared for his own health.
"I
cried when I witnessed the death of my turkeys. I cannot forget those
moments ... But now I think of myself and what will happen to my
health. I cannot go near my wife and children," the paper quoted
Eksen as saying.
Agriculture
Minister Mehdi Eker assured the country late Saturday, October 8, that
"everything is under control."
"Unfortunately
we have been confronted with bird flu but everything is under
control," Agence France-Presse (AFP) quoted him as saying.
"All
measures have been taken. There is no reason to be worried."
Migratory
Birds
Officials
say the infected turkeys probably contracted the disease from
migratory birds heading for a nearby natural park called Bird
Paradise.
The
migratory birds come from Russia's Ural mountains, Reuters quoted them
as saying.
Russia
has been badly hit by avian flu, which recently killed 100,000 birds
in one large industrial farm in the Southern Urals, though the
outbreak now appears to be petering out with the departure of
migratory birds ahead of winter.
Romania
reported its first case of avian flu on Friday, October 7, but was
still trying to establish whether the virus found in domestic birds in
its Danube delta was harmful to humans.
The
European Commission said on Sunday it was following developments in
Romania and Turkey, and was in close contact with the EU hopefuls and
member states.
"We're
looking into it to establish the facts ... the Turkish and Romanian
case are two different ones," a spokesman for the EU Commission
said.
Turkish
Veterinary experts are carrying out tests to determine what strain of
bird flu has struck.
The
H5N1 avian influenza virus has killed millions of birds across Asia
and infected 116 people, killing more than 60 of them.
Scientists
fear the virus, currently known to pass to humans from birds, could
mutate and be passed among humans.
The
World Health Organisation warned last month that bird flu was moving
towards a form that could be passed between humans and the world had
no time to waste to prevent a pandemic.
No
specific vaccine can be produced until the virus mutates, but
antiviral medication might be effective if given quickly when symptoms
develop.