Experts were carrying out tests Tuesday on
dead birds washed up on Hong Kong beaches amid fears of a huge unreported
avian-flu outbreak in neighboring mainland China, dpa
reported.
The discovery of the dead birds - which were being tested for
H5N1, the bird-flu strain that can be deadly in humans - brought a warning from
one of the territory's top bird-flu experts that "something very
terrible" could be happening in China.
Three of 12 birds found on the Hong Kong island of Lantau in the past five days have tested positive for H5N1.
Villagers on the island said dead birds have been washing
ashore in recent days and they believe they come from China's Pearl River Delta, which flows out into the South China Sea surrounding Hong Kong.
On Monday alone, the carcasses of one goose, five chickens, a
duck and two birds were found, bringing to 12 the number of dead birds found on
Lantau since Thursday.
China has in the past hushed up outbreaks of bird flu and
SARS, or severe acute respiratory syndrome, which was rampant in southern China before it spread to Hong Kong and other countries around the world in 2003, killing hundreds
of people.
Eight people in China were reported to have died of bird flu
in January but, speaking on the government-run radio station RTHK Tuesday,
infectious diseases expert Lo Wing-Lok warned the outbreak in China could be far bigger than officials admit.
"This is suddenly something very serious," said Lo,
a legislator and chairman of the Hong Kong Medical Association. "We have
to confirm the source of these dead birds, whether it is local or from the
mainland.
"If they are from the mainland, something very terrible
could be happening across the border."
Lo said there were already indications that "something
extraordinary" was happening in China because of the large number of
bird-flu cases reported in a short period of time.
"In January, there were eight human cases reported to have
come down with H5N1 infection," Lo said. "The source of the
infection, of course, is poultry.
"Poultry infection may be widespread in the mainland and
because of that, [infected] birds may find their way across the border through
the water currents, through fishing boats, from visitors bringing a few birds
at a time. These are all possibilities we need to consider."
Hong Kong saw the first outbreak in modern times of bird flu
to infect humans in 1997 when six people died and 12 others fell ill.
Since then, it has carried out two mass culls and introduced
strict market controls and border controls with China, avoiding human deaths in
any of the recent bird-flu outbreaks to sweep the region.