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Last updated at: (Beijing Time) Friday, January 16, 2004

China takes measures to prevent bird flu

China has implemented a series of measures to prevent bird flu from entering China, said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Kong Quan in Beijing Thursday.


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China has implemented a series of measures to prevent bird flu from entering China, said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Kong Quan Thursday.

Kong said China's Ministry of Agriculture and State Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine had taken strict measures to forbid imports of certain live poultry and related products from countries hit by bird flu.

The Chinese government attached great importance to the issues concerned with bird flu, Kong said, adding that China hoped those affected countries would implement effective measures to stop the spread of bird flu as soon as possible.

It is reported that Vietnam, Japan and the Republic of Korea have been struck by bird flu.

China to intensify quarantine over people from bird flu-hit countries
China's State Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine issued a circular Thursday urging its subordinate quarantine departments to step up quarantine over people from the regions hit by bird flu.

The circular calls on all local quarantine departments to take rigid measures, such as testing body temperatures and registering health conditions, to quarantine those from the Republic of Korea (ROK), Japan and Vietnam, three Asian nations stricken by the poultry disease.

The circular asks local quarantine departments to enhance monitoring and epidemiology research over acute respiratory disease cases and immediately report any suspected case.

The circular also urges people to avoid direct contact with infected poultry and people, and not to eat live or incompletely cooked chicken or ducks so as to avoid infection.

By Jan. 14 in Vietnam, altogether 15 people had contracted the bird flu, and 12 of them had died.

The World Health Organization (WHO) confirmed on Jan. 14 that those Vietnamese that died of the disease was infected with Virus H5N1, the same type of virus causing the bird flu epidemic in HongKong in 1997.



China bans birds from Japan, Vietnam
The Chinese government decided Thursday to ban importing birds from Japan and Vietnam, which havebeen hit by severe bird flu.

China's State Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspectionand Quarantine (SAQSIQ) and the Ministry of Agriculture jointly issued the circular Thursday.

All birds that have been transported to China from the two countries will be returned or destroyed, the SAQSIQ source said.

The circular also forbade birds from the two countries to be sent by post or carried by passengers.

Birds from the two countries will be sealed off if they are found on international ships, airplanes and trains that pass China,the SAQSIQ said.

All the birds smuggled from the two countries will be destroyedby quarantine authorities, the circular said.

China bans pigs, wild boars from ROK
China began to forbid importing pigs, wild boars and any pig and wild boar produce from the Republic of Korea (ROK), which reported hog cholera cases early January.

China's State Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspectionand Quarantine (SAQSIQ) and the Ministry of Agriculture jointly issued the circular Thursday.

All pigs, wild boars and their produce that have been transported to China from the ROK will be returned or destroyed, the SAQSIQ source said.

The circular also forbade pigs, wild boars and their produce from the ROK to be sent by post or carried by passengers.

These produce from the ROK will be sealed up if they are found on international ships, airplanes and trains going through China, the SAQSIQ said.

China refuses imports of cloven-hoofed animals from Tajikistan
Cloven-hoofed animals imported from Tajikistan have been banned in China, the State Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine (SAQSIQ) said Thursday.

The SAQSIQ made the announcement in a joint circular with the Ministry of Agriculture Thursday, saying the move was to protect animals in China from foot-and-mouth disease.

Three cases of foot-and-mouth disease were reported in Tajikistan recently.

All cloven-hoofed animals that have been carried to China from Tajikistan will be returned or destroyed, the SAQSIQ source said.

The circular also forbade people to send cloven-hoofed animals by post and banned passengers from carrying them into China from Tajikistan.

These animals and their produce will be sealed off if they are found on international ships, flights and trains that pass China, the SAQSIQ said.

All cloven-hoofed animals found smuggled from Tajikistan into the country will be destroyed by the quarantine authorities, the circular said.


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