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Southeast Asia Finalises Bird Flu Plan Ahead of Donors' Meeting
KUALA LUMPUR, Jan 5 (AFP) - Southeast Asian
officials said Thursday they were finalising an ambitious three-year
strategy to combat bird flu before a donors' meeting to appeal for
up to 150 million dollars to fund the program. The Association of
Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) bird flu task force wraps up its
talks here Friday before a January 17-18 donor meeting in Beijing.
Aziz Mangkat, director-general of Malaysia's Department of
Veterinary Services, said the action plan was aimed at controlling
and eradicating the deadly H5N1 strain of avian influenza virus in
the region. "It is also to ensure that ASEAN countries are well
prepared if there is a breakout in any member countries," he said.
Aziz, who chaired the meeting, said he hoped foreign donors and
institutions would come forward to provide financial assistance to
carry out the proposed projects in ASEAN countries. "This is a
regional approach. We have identified nine strategic areas and 15
projects which could be implemented over a three-year period
starting this year," he said. "We need to implement the measures
urgently." "The international community should also share the
responsibility to eradicate the disease," he said, adding that many
regional nations were too poor to foot the bill themselves. Aziz
said that at this week's talks the task force was establishing how
much it would cost to implement the plan. He declined to give an
expected cost, but an official from one of the ASEAN country
delegations said that "some 150 million dollars may be required to
carry out the projects." The areas the task force has identified
include disease surveillance, implemententation of disease control
measures, eradication policies, emergency response and public
awareness campaigns, he said. Aziz said the program would give
Southeast Asia a "harmonised and standardised" approach to fight the
disease, which has killed more than 70 people in East Asia since
2003 and triggered fears of a global pandemic. He said the proposed
plan would fight the bird flu threat at its source -- the insanitary
system of raising and slaughtering animals in Asia. "The threat to
the whole region is still there," he said. Gary Greene, the
Beijing-based director of the US Department of Agriculture's
regional Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, praised
Southeast Asia for forging the eradication plan. He said the Beijing
meeting would be attended by potential donors from the World Bank,
Asian Development Bank (ADB), the United States, the European Union
and Japan. Representatives from eight ASEAN nations attended the
three-day talks, along with officials from the ADB, World
Organisation for Animal Health and the United Nations' Food and
Agriculture Organization. jsm/sls/sm |