/ 9 August 2006

Bird flu given national-threat status in Thailand

Thailand on Wednesday declared bird flu a national threat and vowed united efforts to tackle the deadly virus, which has claimed 16 lives since its first outbreak here in 2004.

”Bird flu is a national threat. If we fail to contain the outbreak of bird flu, it could spell disaster for our country,” Deputy Prime Minister Chidchai Vanasathidya told a meeting of about 260 local officials.

”Tourists would not come here and the outbreak of bird flu could wreck our poultry industry,” he said, urging local officials to cooperate with the central government to fight the H5N1 virus.

Thailand has suffered 24 human cases of bird flu, including 16 fatalities, since the disease was first detected in the country in early 2004.

On Tuesday it declared more than one third of the country, including Bangkok, a disaster zone as a precaution to help local officials battle the virus.

Bird flu has badly hurt Thailand’s poultry industry. It was the world’s biggest chicken exporter until countries around the world slapped bans on raw Thai chicken in the wake of bird-flu fears in 2004.

Thailand, now the world’s fourth-largest exporter of poultry, exports mainly cooked chicken.

Fears over bird flu could also cast a pall over tourism, which accounts 6% of the kingdom’s economy. — AFP

 

AFP