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						Germany to cull geese 
						after low risk bird flu found on firm 
			
   
            
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		[November 21, 2016] 
		HAMBURG (Reuters) - German 
		authorities are preparing to cull 8,800 geese on a farm in the north of 
		the country where a low risk strain of bird flu has been found, 
		authorities said on Monday. 
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			 Some 1,800 geese on a farm in Dithmarschen have a low risk H5 bird 
			flu, said the environment ministry in the state of 
			Schleswig-Holstein. Another 7,000 geese at a different location 
			owned by the same farm are also suspected to have bird flu but it is 
			not known whether this is the low risk type or the highly contagious 
			H5N8 strain, the state ministry said. 
			 
			A series of European countries and Israel have found cases of H5N8 
			bird flu in the past few weeks and some have ordered that poultry 
			flocks be kept indoors to avoid the disease spreading. 
			
			  
			Most outbreaks involve wild birds but Germany, Hungary and Austria 
			have also reported cases in domestic duck and turkey farms where all 
			poultry have had to be culled. A case was also reported on a farm in 
			Denmark on Monday. 
			 
			The contagious H5N8 strain has been found in wild birds in much of 
			Germany over past days and the country's government has tightened 
			sanitary rules for farms and warned it may order poultry to be kept 
			inside. 
			
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			More outbreaks of a severe strain of bird flu in Europe are likely 
			to occur in the next few weeks as wild birds believed to transmit 
			the virus migrate southward, the deputy head of the world animal 
			health body said. 
			(Reporting by Michael Hogan; Editing by Mark Potter) 
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