Tuesday, September 26, 2006

Thai man who bred fighting cocks dies of bird flu

A 59-year-old Thai man who bred and raised fighting cocks in northeastern Thailand contracted the H5N1 bird flu virus and has died, bringing the country’s human death toll from the disease to 17, health officials said Tuesday.

The man, from Nong Bua Lamphu province, had been treating his sick fighting cocks with herbal medicines when he was exposed to the disease, said Thawat Suntrajarn, director-general of the Department of Communicable Disease Control. He became ill on July 14 with fever and aches, and died on Aug. 10, said a statement from the Health Ministry.

“He didn’t give his full history to the doctor that he raised chickens, that they were sick, and that they had died,” Thawat told The Associated Press. “He was scared that the agriculture officials would kills his birds.”

In Thailand, Thawat said he had about 50 fighting cocks on his farm and assumed that since there weren’t any bird flu outbreaks in the area near his home, his birds couldn’t possibly have died of bird flu.

“His wife finally confessed 14 days after he became sick,” Thawat said, adding that officials have gone to the man’s farm to cull poultry according to standard protocol.

Cock fighting is hugely popular in Thailand, and owners have resisted previous culls by hiding their expensive birds.

The man came from the None Sang district of Nong Bua Lamphu, about 420 kilometers (260 miles) northeast of Bangkok.

Avian Influenza Home - Story Source

Posted by john T. on 09/26 at 06:34 AM
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