Thai senator suspects H5N1 coverup
Bird flu has returned, suspects senator http://www.manager.co.th/IHT/ViewNews.aspx?NewsID=9490000091181 - http://www.manager.co.th/IHT/ViewNews.aspx?NewsID=9490000091181 By Phoojadkarn Daily 17 July 2006 02:11 Outgoing Ubon Ratchathani senator Nirand Pitakwatchara said at the weekend that he believes bird flu has resurfaced in Thailand, but that state authorities have concealed the matter for political reasons.
Nirand, a former chairman of the senate committee on social development and human security, said it was most likely that the Agriculture Ministry, under Khunying Sudarat Keyuraphan, who was responsible for dealing with avian flu when she was Public Health Minister, has teamed up with the Public Health Ministry to cover up the reappearance of the disease to protect the Thai Rak Thai government.
“If bird flu has really come back, it means that all the government’s measures to prevent the disease have failed miserably,” said Nirand.
“It seems to me that the government’s previous actions were only meant to build up its image and gain political popularity,” he added.
The senator’s comments coincided with the disclosure by a livestock official who told a Phoojadkarn Daily reporter that bird flu has returned in Phichit and Phitsanulok provinces, killing poultry there in recent months.
Livestock officials have been told to keep their mouths shut as the news may affect the government’s stability and lead to a worsening of political and economic conditions, said the source, who asked not to be named.
RSOE HAVARIA Alert ~ Biologycal Hazard - Thailand GLIDE CODE: BH-20060713-6770-THA Biologycal Hazard - Thailand Event date/time: 2006.07.13 - 18:35:37 Event: Biologycal Hazard Location: Thailand Descriptions:
Thailand's Northeast is on alert for possible outbreaks of avian influenza after poultry were found dead from unknown causes in the region, regional officials said Thursday. However, the authorities stressed, no bird flu case has been confirmed. Regional Office of Animal Heath and Sanitation 3 director Suwudhi Chalejorn, who oversees the nine provinces in Thailand's northeast, said poultry found dead in five of seven provinces have already tested negative, but lab results are not yet available for nine dead birds from Surin and one from Yasothon. The poultry deaths alerted local animal husbandry officials to boost prevention measures against possible outbreaks of bird flu in all provinces under supervision of the regional office, he said. Dr. Samroeng Yaengkratok, head of Nakhon Ratchasima provincial public health office said that during the first six months of 2006 no patients in the northeast were reported as infected with bird flu.
Ministry says it hasn't been covering up any outbreaks http://www.bangkokpost.com/News/18Jul2006_news19.php - http://www.bangkokpost.com/News/18Jul2006_news19.php
Tuesday July 18, 2006
PIYAPORN WONGRUANG
The Agriculture and Cooperatives Ministry yesterday denied vehemently it had been covering up fresh outbreaks of bird flu following reports of mass deaths of poultry over the past few weeks.
It could not possibly conceal such outbreaks because its bird flu surveillance and diagnostic operations were monitored closely by various agencies such as the World Organisation for Animal Health, said Charal Trinvuthipong, assistant to the agriculture and cooperatives minister.
Covering up bird flu outbreaks would also end up doing more harm than good to the country, he added.
Officials had conducted so-called "X-ray" bird flu surveillance tests nationwide from last month and about 53,000 fowl tissue samples tested negative for bird flu, Mr Charal said.
Mr Charal was responding to a pointed query from an outgoing senator, Nirun Phitakwatchara, a member of the Senate's panel on human development and social security, who suspected the ministry had been concealing the recurrence of bird flu after poultry deaths on a large scale were reported in many areas devastated by previous outbreaks.
The ministry was accused of mismanagement and covering up the disease when it first struck the country in early 2004.
About 61 million poultry died or were culled in the first outbreak. But H5N1 has not been detected in Thailand since November.
"Our ongoing active bird flu surveillance operations may have misled people into believing there have been bird flu outbreaks. It's true that the disease, which is now endemic to Thailand, may emerge again today or tomorrow. However, it is impossible for us to cover up outbreaks if they do occur," said Mr Charal.
The Livestock Development Department reported on Sunday that fowl died in huge numbers in 430 tambons in 50 provinces. The department's laboratory tests confirmed that 351 tambons were free of bird flu, while 79 tambons in 23 provinces were still awaiting test results.
Meanwhile, more chicken deaths were reported yesterday, including about 1,000 in Phichit and 300 in Phitsanulok provinces. The test results on the samples are due to be released next week.
Pornchai Chamnanpood, director of the department's National Institute of Animal Health, a focal point for diagnosing bird flu in animals, also dismissed the allegation that the institute was "ordered" to cover up bird flu detections.
He said the fowl deaths were caused by weather fluctuations and environmental changes, which had prompted some fungi and bacteria to grow more rapidly, devastating livestock. The lethal organisms had been found in some chicken carcasses.However, a high-level source at the department said about 10% of samples were unsuitable for diagnosis of H5N1. The bird flu virus could be elusive and impossible to detect in some cases.
Yukol Limlamthong, head of the Livestock Development Department, said that since the disease was already present in the country, the department did not rule out a possibility of a re-emergence of the virus. The department had been upgrading poultry farm management along with imposing strict controls on fowl movements and carrying out frequent disinfections of bird flu-risk areas as part of the bird flu prevention and surveillance scheme.
Seven provinces in Thailand placed on bird flu watch http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=97492&version=1&template_id=45&parent_id=25 - http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=97492&version=1&template_id=45&parent_id=25
listPublished: Sunday, 16 July, 2006, 01:54 PM Doha Time BANGKOK: Thailand has stepped up bird flu surveillance in seven provinces for the hot, monsoon season when the virus could re-emerge, a senior government official said yesterday. “July is a risky month. Over the past two years the outbreak started this month,” Yukol Limlaemthong, head of the Livestock Department, said. He said four northern provinces — Uttaradit, Sukhothai, Phitsanulok and Pichit — would be closely monitored for outbreaks of the H5N1 virus, which has killed 14 Thais since it emerged in late 2003.
“They are risky areas because of flooding and the rainy season. This situation is good for the virus to grow. We have not found the virus, but we want people to be alert,” Yukol said.
Three provinces where outbreaks have occured in the past two years — Suphan Buri and Kanchanaburi in the west and Nakhon Pathom near the capital, Bangkok — were also on the watch list.
Thailand was slow to respond to the disease when it began ravaging poultry flocks in late 2003, but it now has one of the strongest surveillance systems in the region.
Thailand has not had a human death since December 2005 and no new outbreaks among poultry for about 8 months.
However, a recent incident where Thai villagers ignored government warnings and handled and ate chickens that died mysteriously has raised fears that public vigilance against the disease is waning.
The global human death toll now stands at 132 after Indonesian officials said on Friday a three-year-old girl who died this month had tested positive for the virus.
Experts fear the avian influenza virus could spark a human pandemic if it mutates into a form that can pass easily among people.-Reuters
A Pattern develops Nirun Phitakwatchara's acusations of a coverup were correct in 2004.
DEADLY BIRD FLU SPREADS http://www9.sbs.com.au/theworldnews/region.php?id=77349®ion=2 - http://www9.sbs.com.au/theworldnews/region.php?id=77349®ion=2 1.21.2004. 15:01:51
Thailand’s first case of bird flu was confirmed on Thursday as the World Health Organisation (WHO) said it feared the H5N1 strain was spreading across Asia.
A Thai senator said a child from Thailand’s Suphan Buri province had tested positive, after the government admitted three people were being tested for the fatal disease.
Senator Nirun Phitakwatchara accused Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra’s office of covering up the outbreak of the disease, after repeatedly denying bird flu had hit Thailand.
"All the academics and experts have had to shut up due to political interference. As a matter of fact they realised that the outbreak had occurred since last November," he said.
Thailand’s announcement came as Bod Dietz, the UN health agency's spokesman in Vietnam, said there were "mounting opportunities" for the virus to mutate.
"We see this as an issue of growing concern that more countries have H5N1 infections among poultry stock," Mr Dietz said.
"Although we have seen no evidence of human-to-human transmission, the next step would be for that to occur.
"It is impossible to predict a time or date for this but there are mounting opportunities for the virus to alter its form and begin affecting the human population," he said.
Meanwhile, the WHO said on Thursday a prototype vaccine to protect humans from the avian influenza could be ready for clinical testing shortly.
It said "a prototype virus could be made available to vaccine manufacturing companies within about four weeks," but that it would take several steps before the vaccine could be ready for use in humans.
Thailand 'covered up' bird flu http://www.news24.com/News24/World/News/0,,2-10-1462_1472838,00.html - http://www.news24.com/News24/World/News/0,,2-10-1462_1472838,00.html
01/22/2004 10:35 - (SA)
Bangkok - Thailand's first case of bird flu has been confirmed in a seven-year-old boy, a senator said Thursday, accusing the government of a cover-up after it repeatedly denied the deadly disease had reached the kingdom.
"The case in Suphan Buri (province) has tested positive, that is for sure," said Senator Nirun Phitakwatchara, who is also chairman of the parliament's Social Development and Human Security committee.
He accused the government of Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra of lying about the outbreak of the deadly disease in order to protect its valuable poultry industry.
"All the academics and experts have had to shut up due to political interference. As a matter of fact, they realised that the outbreak had occurred since last November," he told reporters.
Nirun urged the government to come clean with the public and admit that the outbreak of "fowl cholera and bronchitis" it is fighting is in fact avian influenza.
Thaksin denied a cover-up, and said it would take several days to confirm the status of the boy in Suphan Buri and two other suspected sufferers who the health minister admitted on Wednesday were being tested for the disease.
"The government is not covering anything up, but the early tests did not detect this virus at all. The government would tell the truth if it was," he said, referring to the three suspected cases.
Nirun said the infected boy was in a serious condition in hospital. The second patient, a chicken butcher from Nakhon Sawan province, needed further testing. He said he had no information on the third suspected sufferer.
"They are in a risk group because they have symptoms of severe pneumonia, they had direct contact with chickens, and all are in affected areas," he said.
Nirun said that the outbreak of chicken disease in five Thai provinces was undoubtedly not fowl cholera and bronchitis but instead the avian influenza that has already hit Vietnam, South Korea, Taiwan and Japan this year.
In the morning the chickens are fine
"This is definitely bird flu because in the morning the chickens are fine but they die suddenly in the afternoon," he said.
The senator said the cull was ineffective because it was not being monitored closely or carried out using proper sanitary techniques.
Thaksin admitted that some of the farmers in affected areas had sent their chickens to market despite being ordered to carry out a cull and being paid for their losses.
"The problem is that the poultry farmers wanted to take the compensation but did not want to kill their chickens, which led to calamity," the premier said.
The World Health Organization is concerned the H5N1 strain of bird flu was spreading across Asia and providing "mounting opportunities" for the virus to mutate into a far more lethal form.
"Although we have seen no evidence of human-to-human transmission the next step would be for that to occur," said Bob Dietz, the UN health agency's spokesperson in Vietnam.
Interesting background of Nirun Phitakwatchara... I like this man!
Economy of the People, For the People and By the People! Put Economic Power in the Hands of the People!
Moralists of the world - unite!
http://www.worldproutassembly.org/archives/2005/12/the_roving_eye_1.html - http://www.worldproutassembly.org/archives/2005/12/the_roving_eye_1.html
People such as senator Nirun Phitakwatchara, one of the leaders of the 1973 Thai student uprising, were positively alarmed. "It's as if we're living in the climate of military rule decades ago," he said. In an editorial, the English-language daily The Nation described Ruengroj as "the wrong man at the wrong place at the wrong time".
Those with long memories readily expressed their fears of radicalization. Pithaya Wongkul, chairman of the Campaign for Popular Democracy, stressed that "the best way out is for the prime minister to dissolve the house and call for a general election to avoid bloodshed - as happened in October 14, 1973 and May 17, 1992." Chaianant Samudvanija, director of Varijavudh College, added that "people are afraid Thaksin will have absolute control over the military, the house and even the senate."
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