Eight countries suspend
French poultry imports after birdflu outbreak
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[December 04, 2015]
PARIS (Reuters) - Eight
countries, including Japan and Morocco, have suspended imports of French
poultry after the deadly H5N1 bird flu virus was detected in
southwestern France, home to many foie gras and poultry producers, the
agriculture ministry said on Thursday.
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The highly pathogenic H5N1 virus killed 22 chickens out of 32 kept
in a family backyard at Biras in the Perigord region, officials said
on Nov. 25. It was the first outbreak in eight years to hit the
European Union's biggest agricultural producer.
An official at the ministry said South Korea, China, Thailand,
Egypt, Algeria and Tunisia were the other countries to suspend
imports. She declined to give further details.
France's health and safety agency has been evaluating the strain's
degree of danger to humans, Agriculture Minister Stephane Le Foll
told reporters last week, insisting there was no risk of
transmission by eating food.
The outbreak comes just before demand for foie gras, produced from
duck or goose liver, peaks over the year-end holiday season, but
officials play down any impact.
Sales of French foie gras were worth around 2 billion euros ($2.1
billion) at the wholesale level last year.
Several countries including Japan, Egypt and Hong Kong banned French
poultry following past outbreaks of H5N1. Japan is the largest
importer of French foie gras.
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Several cases of bird flu have been detected in the last two weeks
of the farms in the Dordogne, a first in France since 2007 and the
discovery of H5N1 in wild swans in Moselle.
(Reporting By Marine Pennetier; writing by John Irish)
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