Bird flu in southeast Hungary

25-01-2007 | | |

The European Commission has been informed by the Hungarian authorities today of an outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza in Csongràd County, southeast Hungary. The virus was suspected when an abnormally high mortality rate was reported in a flock of over 3,000 geese.

Diagnostic tests carried out by Hungary’s national laboratory confirmed the virus to be the highly pathogenic H5 strain, and samples will now be sent to the Community Reference Laboratory for avian influenza in Weybridge to determine if it is the H5N1 virus.
Upon suspicion of the disease, the Hungarian authorities have already culled the infected flock, in order to prevent the spread of the virus. They are also applying the measures laid down in the Avian Influenza Directive and Decision 2006/415/EC on avian influenza in domestic. This entails the establishment of a protection zone of 3 km radius and a surveillance zone of 10 km around the infected holding, where poultry must be kept indoors, movement of poultry is banned except directly to the slaughterhouse, and the dispatch of meat outside the zone is forbidden except where products have undergone the controls provided for under EU legislation.
The area covered by the protection zone and the surveillance zone is classified as a high risk area (area A) which is surrounded by a low risk area (area B) acting as a buffer zone to the disease free parts of the country. Strict movement controls are in place, there is a prohibition on gatherings of poultry and other birds and on-farm biosecurity measures will be strengthened.
This is the first incidence of highly pathogenic avian influenza in the EU since August 2006, when one case occurred in Dresden zoo in Germany. Heightened surveillance is in place throughout the EU, to identify and eradicate the H5N1 virus as quickly as possible if it occurs.
 
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