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UN-led alliance to develop bird
flu early-warning System
PakistanTimes.net
Staff Report
UNITED NATIONS: An alliance
of or ganizations
led by the U.N. will develop an avian flu early-warning system able to alert
countries and communities to the arrival of potentially infected wild birds,
the world body’s environment agency announced today.
Although experts said it could take two years to be fully realized, the new
initiative by the Convention on Migratory Species with support and funding
from the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) will warn authorities on different
continents that migratory water birds are on their way, the Nairobi-based
UNEP said.
Experts from other leading organizations such as Wetlands International,
Birdlife International and the International Wildlife and Game Federation
are also expected to be part of the scheme.
Special maps are to be developed for individual countries pinpointing the
precise locations such as lakes, marshes and other wetland areas where the
birds are likely to go.
Armed with this information, local health and environment bodies on
continents like Africa, Asia and in Latin America will be better able to
prioritize their planning and response, which could include warning farmers
to move poultry away from key wetlands so as to minimize cross transmission
with migratory birds.
Migratory Birds
"Precise information on the places where migratory birds go, including their
resting sites and finally destinations is currently scattered across a
myriad of organizations, bodies and groups," said Klaus Toepfer, Executive
Director of UNEP in Nairobi.
"It is absolutely vital that this is brought together in a way that is
useful to those dealing with the threat of this pandemic backed up by high
quality, precision, mapping."
Robert Hepworth, the Convention’s Executive Secretary, pledged to work with
UNEP and other partners to develop this early-warning system, but said that
could take as long as two years.
"But we know that it is needed and we know that the issue of avian flu and
similar infections is likely to be a long-term one," he said. "So such a
system should be useful not only over the short but over the long term too."
News of the system came as hundreds of delegates gathered in Nairobi for the
eighth Conference of the Parties to the Convention, which opens tomorrow and
runs until Friday.●
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