Some 30 tigers infected with bird flu virus
were culled on Wednesday at a private zoo in eastern Thailand to curb further
spread of the epidemic, local press reported on Thursday.
The 30 tigers have fallen sick of the H5N1 avian influenza virus at the Sri
Racha Zoo, where the other 30 tigers died of the disease earlier this week.
"We are not going to treat them, since we consider them to be the source of
the disease," the Disease Control Department director-general Thawat
Suntharacharn was quoted by newspaper The Nation as saying.
The 30 sick tigers were given injection of potassium chloride to stop their
hearts.
They would be later either cremated or buried in deep-dug pit.
Altogether 60 tigers at the private zoo have been culled or died of the
disease since Oct. 14, when the first tiger died of infection.
The authorities are now closely monitoring animals at the zoo, which raises
more than 400 tigers and several crocodiles, ostrichsand other animals.
Animals
falling sick of the disease will be allculled.
It's suspected that the tigers were infected by being fed with chicken
carcass, and related investigation is being conducted.
Some 56 people taking care of the animals have also gone through medical
check and were proved free of the virus.
Having hit by two rounds of bird flu outbreaks, the government has placed
fighting the disease as the country's top priority and set Oct. 31 as the
deadline to eradicate bird flu from the kingdom.
The poultry epidemic has caused great economic loss including at least 30
million birds culled in first outbreak and more than 100 million US dollars has
been spent for compensation.
The epidemic also claimed lives of 11 Thais during the two outbreaks and the kingdom has been fully alerted over a "probable human-to-human transmission" case.
Source: Xinhua