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Low compensation for culling hits India bird flu fight
25 Jan 2008 09:18:54 GMT
Source: Reuters
By Bappa Majumdar

KOLKATA, India, Jan 25 (Reuters) - Inadequate compensation for villagers in exchange for culling their poultry may be hampering India's efforts to contain a serious outbreak of bird flu, officials said on Friday.

Some villagers in the affected districts of the eastern state of West Bengal have been chasing out culling teams, complaining that 40 rupees ($1) on offer for every bird culled is below market rates. The state government has managed to cull only about 700,000 birds so far.

Its target is 2 million.

"A villager can sell a chicken for at least 80 to 100 rupees for a single chicken, so their resistance to culling is not wrong at all," said Nazrul Islam, the president of the West Bengal Poultry Association.

Bird flu has spread to nine of West Bengal's 19 districts across an area spanning more than 300 km (190 miles). Officials, who fear the outbreak could spiral out of control, are worried the disease could break out in the crowded state capital of Kolkata.

The central government's laboratory tests have confirmed the virulent H5N1 strain of the disease is present in at least two of those districts; officials expect further tests will show the same strain in the remaining districts.

India's bird flu action plan makes clear that efforts to stamp out the disease will only succeed if adequate compensation is offered for forced cullings.

Anisur Rahaman, the state's animal resources minister, said his government is discussing compensation with the centre.

"We are also thinking about raising compensation if possible," he said.

But not everyone is resisting the culling. In some areas, children without protective gear helped out culling teams by chasing and catching birds for them.

The World Health Organization (WHO) worries that the H5N1 strain, which has already killed more than 200 people worldwide since 2003, could mutate into a form that passes easily between humans and infect and kill millions.

This is the fourth outbreak of the strain in India since 2006, although it has never recorded a case of human infection. The WHO says this is the most serious outbreak in India so far.

Hundreds of chicken deaths have been reported since Thursday in West Bengal's Jalpaiguri district, along India's border with Bhutan.

Bhutan has already banned Indian poultry. Guards on both side of the border are watching out for chicken smugglers. But officials in Dehi have already conceded there is little to stop infected wild birds flying across.

Animal husbandry officials in Delhi have speculated that sick birds hailing from Bangladesh may have spread the disease into neighbouring West Bengal.

Bangladesh has been struggling with the H5N1 strain since last March, and the livestock ministry said on Friday that it had now spread to 27 of its 64 districts. (Additional reporting by Ruma Paul in Dhaka; Editing by Jonathan Allen and Sanjeev Miglani)


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Last updated:Fri Jan 25 09:18:23 2008