Tense wait for Nigeria
2006-02-13 09:51
Kaduna - Samples taken from a Nigerian family suspected of contracting a fatal bird flu strain have been sent abroad so experts can determine whether the virus has jumped to humans in Africa for the first time, a top health official said.
Two children were reported ill near a farm in the northern town of Jaji, where the deadly H5N1 bird flu strain was detected on a poultry farm on Wednesday, marking its first reported spread into Africa.
A joint team of state and federal officials took samples from the children and their family, and sent them abroad to see if they test positive for the virus, Abdulsalam Nasidi, a federal Health Ministry official said after visiting the family on Sunday.
"Everybody in the family is being tested," Nasidi said. "We have taken the samples to different places, both in Nigeria and abroad."
88 people have died
The H5N1 strain has killed at least 88 people, mostly in Asia, since 2003. No human cases have been confirmed in Africa so far.
Nasidi gave no details on the family's size and declined to say where the tests were sent. He said the children "are in fairly good condition ... but we are still observing them."
Health officials fear the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu will evolve into a virus that can be transmitted easily between people and become a pandemic. Most human cases of the disease so far have been linked to contact with infected birds.
Federal government and regional health officials said they would start screening people on Monday who have worked on farms hit by bird flu.
Experts from the United States-based Centres for Disease Control and Prevention arrived in Nigeria on Sunday with equipment and protective clothing for 200 Nigerian health officials who will cull birds in the north of the country, Agriculture Minister Adamu Bello said.
They were joined by two regional officials for the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation, said the FAO chief for Nigeria, Helder Muteia. More experts are expected to arrive in Nigeria over the coming days to draw up a plan of action after discussions with authorities.
Nigerian officials have tried to contain the disease by burning chickens and other birds suspected of being infected across the north.
But authorities have not taken action on international recommendations to shut poultry markets and halt the shipping of domestic birds around the country.
In Kaduna city, prices for chickens had fallen by a third as many people shunned poultry markets, where traders were selling the birds Saturday in large, round wicker baskets.
"People are not buying, but this is our business," said chicken seller Adamu Yusuf. "We are trying to see if we can make some money to meet our needs."
The virus has been confirmed at a total of five farms in Kaduna, Kano and Plateau states, killing at least 100 000 birds.
Associated Press writers Daniel Balint-Kurti in Lagos and Oloche Samuel in Kano, Nigeria, contributed to this report.
- AP