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ロシア・シベリアとインドネシアの鳥インフルエンザ関連記事
http://www.asyura2.com/0505/gm11/msg/272.html
投稿者 ネオファイト 日時 2005 年 7 月 31 日 16:18:36: ihQQ4EJsQUa/w
 

(回答先: 07/28 21:35 「危険性はテロ以上」 鳥インフルエンザで外相ら 共同 投稿者 倉田佳典 日時 2005 年 7 月 29 日 20:29:08)

ロシアで初の鳥インフルエンザ 時事
http://www.asyura2.com/0505/gm11/msg/266.html
投稿者 倉田佳典 日時 2005 年 7 月 25 日 20:19:04

http://www.mosnews.com/news/2005/07/21/brdflurus.shtml
Bird Flu Cases Registered in Russia’s Siberia
Created: 21.07.2005 15:41 MSK (GMT +3), Updated: 16:23 MSK
http://www.mosnews.com/news/2005/07/22/flunothuman.shtml
http://www.mosnews.com/news/2005/07/22/anotherflu.shtml
http://www.mosnews.com/news/2005/07/25/birdflu.shtml

について、30日にH5N1型を確認と言う記事が出ました。人への感染はまだみられないようす。
http://www.mosnews.com/news/2005/07/30/birdflu.shtml
Lethal Bird Flu Strain Found in Siberia - Russian Ministry
Created: 30.07.2005 12:47 MSK (GMT +3), Updated: 12:51 MSK



ジャカルタ郊外で鳥インフルエンザの疑いで3人死亡
http://www.asyura2.com/0505/gm11/msg/244.html
投稿者 やました 日時 2005 年 7 月 15 日 23:02:02

疑いの時点の記事
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4684965.stm
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/JAK36923.htm
確認の時点の記事
http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/07/20/asia/web.0720flu.php
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4698863.stm

について、まず、鶏はこの2年で960万羽死んだと言うニュース[新華社]
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2005-07/19/content_3240975.htm
Avian influenza kills over 9.5 mln chickens in Indonesia
www.chinaview.cn 2005-07-19 22:43:54

JAKARTA, July 19 (Xinhuanet) -- Avian Influenza, or bird flu, has led to the death of 9.53 million chickens in Indonesia since the first outbreak was reported in August 2003, an official from the Ministry of Agriculture said here on Tuesday.

It was the total number of chickens killed over the last two years, Sudarmono, head of the animal disease prevention and eradication subdirectorate said.

"Since its first outbreak, we have conducted various prevention efforts, including vaccination of healthy chickens, surveillance programs and bio-security through the implementation of tight inspection of livestock and human beings," Antara news agency quoted Sudarmono as saying.

The efforts have generated good results, even though, sporadically, special incidents still took place, especially with quails and other local fowl, he said.

Vaccination programs were applied at small-scale poultry farms as the large-scale ones already had their own vaccination schedules, he added.

Sudarmono said that last year alone the Ministry of Agriculture distributed 296 million dosages of vaccine, of which 70 percent had been done this year.

そして、鳥インフルエンザ撲滅に向けて感染した豚を処分していると言う話[IHT-APリンク]
http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/07/24/news/indo.php
Indonesia destroys pigs in effort to halt bird flu
The Associated Press MONDAY, JULY 25, 2005
及び、インドネシアのパニックぶり[ワシントンポスト]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/07/24/AR2005072401146.html?nav=hcmodule
Bird Flu Deaths Sow Panic In Wealthy Jakarta Suburb
Officials Have Not Found Source of Outbreak

By Alan Sipress
Washington Post Foreign Service
Monday, July 25, 2005; Page A16

SERPONG, Indonesia -- When Iwan Siswara Rafei, a government auditor, and his two young daughters died suddenly this month, there was panic in their middle-class suburb along with reports that they were Indonesia's first casualties of bird flu.

Neighbors anxiously traded rumors across the metal fences surrounding their neatly landscaped yards. Mothers kept their children from playing on the palm-lined streets. Some families in this quiet California-style subdivision of bankers, businessmen and doctors considered packing up their belongings in their SUVs and abandoning their homes.

Most residents of the Villa Melati Mas bedroom community on the western outskirts of Jakarta had paid little mind to reports of avian influenza, which has devastated poultry flocks across Indonesia during the last two years and killed dozens of people in other Southeast Asian countries.

Then the horror came home to 7 Pondok Cempaka St.

"We've really got a panic attack," said Kresentia Widyanto, 40, a mother of three with shoulder-length auburn hair who wore a floral housedress. "People have been asking, 'Do we need to evacuate and go somewhere else, to vacate this place?' "

For 15 years, Widyanto and her husband, a physician, have lived around the corner from Rafei's brown cottage with its pitched, terra-cotta roof and small purple flowers in planters out front. Widyanto's son is 8 years old, the same age as Rafei's daughter, Sabrina. When the girl was hospitalized late last month with a high fever, diarrhea and a cough, word spread quickly.

Rafei's second daughter, 1-year-old Thalita, developed similar symptoms days later, followed by Rafei, 37. By July 14, all three had died, with Sabrina surviving the longest.

Indonesian health officials announced last week that they suspected bird flu; test results, received Wednesday from a specialized laboratory in Hong Kong, confirmed it. Rafei's sample tested positive for the highly lethal virus while a specimen from the older daughter showed she, too, had been exposed. No test was done for the younger one.

So far, nearly all of the avian flu victims in Asia have contracted the disease from infected birds. International health experts warn that the virus could spark a pandemic, killing tens of millions of people, if the strain evolves into a form easily passed among people.

"I'm wondering why this happened. I'm confused. Can we get this? We're trying to be calm," Widyanto said anxiously as she stocked up on broccoli and cauliflower from a vegetable peddler plying the subdivision's cobblestone streets. She has forbidden her children to eat outside the home in case the virus can spread through food. "We've stopped going to Kentucky Fried Chicken," she said.

Stoking the neighborhood's fear is uncertainty about the outbreak's cause. Unlike the rural villages of Vietnam, Thailand and Cambodia, where other bird flu deaths have occurred, there are no farmers or live chickens in Villa Melati Mas.

"The mystery about how they got the disease makes us really nervous and government officials can't explain it," said Listari, 33, whose husband is a banker, standing in her front doorway, hands folded on a pregnant stomach. Like many Indonesians, she uses one name.

Around the sprawling subdivision, a few parrots and other pet birds twittered in cages hanging from front porches and balconies. But neighbors buy their meat at the local supermarket, tucked amid recently built malls and strip shopping centers, not from traditional live poultry markets blamed in some other deaths.

"We couldn't imagine this happening here," Listari said. "It's so bizarre, so strange."

Rumors have been rampant. Worried relatives call from elsewhere in Indonesia, agitated by the latest speculation on national television. Neighbors have telephoned the local leader, Sunaryo, in the middle of the night, alarmed by gossip that Rafei's wife had also died. In truth, his wife, son and two maids remain healthy.

"We'd heard of bird flu before but didn't pay attention," said Sunaryo, 62, a retired executive who volunteers as the neighborhood leader. "We got terrified because we didn't know the truth about this disease."

Shortly after the deaths, Sunaryo called into a television talk show featuring the nation's health minister, Siti Fadilah Supari, and asked her to visit the neighborhood to address the residents directly.

More than 200 people crowded into the local swim and tennis club that weekend for the meeting. Flanked by fellow officials, the minister briefed neighbors about the experience of other countries with bird flu. She urged them not to worry, guaranteeing them that bird flu could not be transmitted person to person.

Despite repeated assurances from government officials, the tests conducted on Rafei and his older daughter, coupled with the timing of the three deaths, suggest the virus might have been passed among family members, according to health experts. Although scientists have not proved that bird flu can spread from one person to another, heath experts say it is possible that transmission among family members has already occurred in about a half-dozen cases in Vietnam, Thailand and Cambodia.

Rafei's wife and his mother, speaking in interviews outside their house, said they did not know how he and the daughters got sick. Rafei was a busy professional who set out early every morning on his two-hour commute to Jakarta's downtown financial district and returned late in the evening, leaving little time for side trips to farms or chicken markets, they explained. His wife, Lin Rosalina, eyes red from crying, said she was also certain her children had not come into contact with live poultry.

"I'm very sure," she added, switching from Indonesian to English to make the point.

Sunaryo, the neighborhood leader, said he also remained skeptical about official reports that Rafei and his daughters caught the virus from birds.

"We don't know how it happened," he said, sitting on his porch and holding his 18-month-old grandson close. "If we don't know the cause, it might be spreading silently."

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