WEST AFRICA: Africa's poorest nations fight to ward off deadly bird flu

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]


DAKAR, 9 February (IRIN) - A string of West African nations on Thursday took 
action against the spread of the deadly bird flu virus following confirmation 
of an outbreak of the disease in Nigeria, the regional powerhouse.

Tiny Benin, which shares a porous border with Nigeria, slapped a ban on imports 
of all poultry products from its neighbour just hours after confirmation of 
Africa's first outbreak of the deadly H5N1 strain on a poultry farm in northern 
Nigeria.

In a statement issued shortly before midnight on Wednesday, Guillaume Hounsoun, 
Director of Animal Husbandry, said that "Poultry products from Nigeria are 
formally banned until further notice" and called for help from the public to 
combat the disease.

"People must contact the nearest veterinary office or the local authorities in 
case of the death of poultry or wild birds," his statement said.

The government of Niger, which also neighbours Nigeria, likewise forbade the 
sale of Nigerian poultry products imported over the past month, announced the 
creation of a special task force, and issued a health warning.

To prevent the spread of the virus, which ravages poultry but can jump to 
humans, the government urged the public to avoid touching dead fowl or birds, 
to wash hands carefully after touching poultry and to eat only cooked poultry 
products, including eggs.

Mauritania and Gabon - which imports 98 percent of the poultry sold on its 
market - also banned Nigerian poultry imports on Wednesday.

Home to the world's six poorest nations, according to UN figures, West Africa 
is particularly vulnerable to the spread of the disease. Its hospitals and 
health services are poorly-equipped and government institutions under-funded 
and often ill-organised.

Many people meanwhile live at close quarters with chickens kept for food while 
migrating birds flock to its river deltas each year.

"We are very worried to see bird flu in Africa," Cheikh Sadibou Fall, the 
advisor to Senegal's Animal Husbandry minister, told IRIN. "Nobody is safe 
given the transmission of the disease by migrating birds. We must take 
immediate steps."

Senegal, whose northwestern Djoudj bird reserve is said to be the world's third 
biggest, last October set up a monitoring system in its bird reserves, began 
training park staff and opened sentinel poultry-farms.

In Gabon, health authorities this week ordered special training for medical 
staff to enable early diagnosis of the disease and opened a sentinel site in 
the main Libreville hospital.

"If the situation in Nigeria gets out of control, it will have a devastating 
impact on the poultry population in the region," said Samuel Jutzi, Director of 
the Food and Agricultural Organisation's (FAO) Animal Production and Health 
Division.

"It will seriously damage the livelihoods of millions of people and it will 
increase the exposure of humans to the virus," Jutzi said in a statement issued 
from FAO's Rome headquarters.

FAO last month brought together countries from across West Africa for a meeting 
in the Malian capital Bamako aimed at establishing a regional bird flu 
monitoring network. The UN agency stumped up cash for a multi-million dollar 
initiative that will run for 18 months.

Many of the countries have been working to combat bird flu for many months. 

In a speech only last week, Togo's Agriculture Minister Charles Kondi, himself 
a veterinary surgeon, said that "as soon as cases were detected in Europe we 
closed our borders to all imports of live fowls because the virus is 
transmitted by live birds."

"But there are pockets along our borders where traders can pass bringing chicks 
in from Ghana," he added.

Cameroon, Ghana, Mali and Mauritania all banned imports of poultry products 
last year and have embarked on action plans, including tighter disease control, 
public information and plans to acquire bird flu vaccines.

But for the string of West African nations still at war or just emerging from 
strife, building a national front against disease will be a challenge.

Take Cote d'Ivoire which remains divided in two with no health or veterinary 
services in place for six million people living in the rebel-held north, or 
Liberia, whose fledgling government is not yet fully in place.


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