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Special Topics 特別主題 >> Wild Birds & Avian Flu 野鳥與禽流感 >> Import bans must be backed by crackdown 鳥盟:禁入口要加嚴打
(Message started by: HKBWS Project on Oct 25th, 2005, 11:48am)

Title: Import bans must be backed by crackdown 鳥盟:禁入口要加嚴打
Post by HKBWS Project on Oct 25th, 2005, 11:48am
BirdLIfe International :

Wild bird import bans must be backed by crackdown

24-10-2005


BirdLife is calling on countries around the world to intensify efforts to stem the illegal trade in wild-caught birds, following recent detection of the highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza virus in both legally imported and smuggled birds.

As the H5N1 avian influenza virus continues to spread, the European Commission is deciding whether to ban the import of wild-caught birds. BirdLife considers a total ban on currently legal wild bird imports to be essential to reduce the risk of H5N1 entering Europe via infected birds, but warns measures must be taken to counter the inevitable rise in smuggling that will follow such a ban. Controls and inspections need to be tightened by both exporting and importing countries.

Any move to restrict legal bird imports must be combined with controls on illegal trade worldwide —Dr Leon Bennun, Director of Science and Policy, BirdLife International

The European Commission is responding to the death of a South American parrot from H5N1, while in quarantine in the UK. The parrot is believed to have been infected by birds imported from Taiwan that shared the same holding facility.

In Taiwan last week, eight birds infected with H5N1 were found in a seized consignment of more than 1,000 smuggled from the southeast Chinese city of Fuzhou. “Taiwan has been officially free of bird ‘flu since 1993, so it’s possible that the infected birds which reached the UK had also been smuggled into Taiwan from the Chinese mainland,” said Dr Leon Bennun, BirdLife International’s Director of Policy.

Millions of live wild-caught birds are thought to be traded each year. A significant proportion of this trade is illegal. At least 117 species of bird are globally threatened with extinction through trapping for the cage-bird trade.

http://www.birdlife.org/news/news/2005/10/bird_flu_and_bird_trade.html



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