France
to cull 600,000 more ducks as fights bird flu virus
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[February 21, 2017]
By Claude Canellas
BORDEAUX, France (Reuters) - France will
cull a further 600,000 ducks as part of efforts to prevent a spread of
the H5N8 bird flu virus, the country's farming minister Stephane Le Foll
said on Tuesday.
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The latest cull will take place in the Landes region of southwest
France, which is home to the most of the country's foie gras
producers.
"We have already culled a lot of ducks in the eastern bit of that
area. We know that there is still an area remaining where we will
have to take action to cull all the ducks," Le Foll told the France
Bleu regional radio station.
France and Hungary have been the countries hardest hit by the highly
contagious H5N8 virus that has been spreading across Europe as well
as Middle Eastern countries in the past three months.
France launched a massive cull in January to try to contain the
virus and said a month ago it would scale back preventative
slaughtering after the spread of the virus slowed, but the number of
farms infected has nevertheless continued to rise.
Foie gras producers have estimated the number of poultry killed or
culled due to bird flu in France at more than 3.2 million birds, and
have forecast this would rise to 3.4 million as the government
extended its culling measures.
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(Reporting by Claude Canellas; Writing by Sudip Kar-Gupta; Editing
by Mark Potter)
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