Live chickens from the mainland were back on sale yesterday in
Hong Kong.
More than 20,000 live chickens from the mainland, 5,500 of which
were from Shenzhen, were imported to the SAR over the weekend,
three weeks after imports were banned following a human bird flu
death in Guangzhou.
The ban was imposed March 6 after the first human bird flu
fatality in Guangdong was confirmed.
Officials said the 20,000 chickens had been cleared for
sale.
Liu Sheng, head of Shenzhen's entry/exit inspection and
quarantine authorities, said Shenzhen has strengthened inspection
of the city's live chicken suppliers since March 6.
All the chicken in Shenzhen have been vaccinated against bird
flu, Liu said.
Shenzhen has reduced the number of live chicken suppliers to
Hong Kong to 35 from the original 135 after strict checks to ensure
the chickens were safe and up to standard, Liu said.
The deadly H5N1 virus has killed more than 100 people worldwide
since late 2003.
Hong Kong residents have traditionally bought chickens live and
have them slaughtered, usually at the market, just prior to
cooking.
The practice has been criticized for bringing people in close
contact with poultry and has been blamed for aiding the spread of
H5N1, which is believed to pass to humans through bird faeces and
viscera.
Hong Kong was the scene of the world's first reported major bird
flu outbreak among humans in 1997, when six people died. The
government slaughtered all the city's 1.5 million poultry to
contain the outbreak.
The last human cases in the SAR were in 2003, when two people
were infected and one died. But 17 birds died from the disease in
recent weeks.
(Shenzhen Daily March 28, 2006)