Experts have warned of another outbreak of bird flu in Maharashtra after the monsoon due to the unscientific disposal of chicken culled in the first episode
Experts have warned of another outbreak of bird flu in Maharashtra after the monsoon due to the unscientific disposal of chicken culled in the first episode of the dreaded virus outbreak in February.
Maharashtra witnessed an outbreak of the bird flu in the Nandurbar and Jalgaon regions, giving a body blow to the once booming poultry industry.If experts of the technical committee set up by the Maharashtra government are to be believed, unscientific disposal of composting poultry litter will lead to spread of the dreaded avian influenza (H5N1) virus in the same region after the rains.
The Maharashtra Pollution Control Board (MPCB) claims that the animal husbandry department ignored its guidelines. But the department maintains that it followed World Health Organisation norms in composting of culled chickens.
"Despite giving it proper guidelines on how to coordinate with firms specialising in composting, the department ignored them and followed its own method," said MPCB member secretary D.B. Boralkar.
"Following a meeting with state and central government officials March 1, we had told the animal husbandry department to coordinate with Excel industries for aerobic composting," Boralkar told IANS.
"Neither did they comply nor take the suggestions of Excel. This was despite basic enquiries on the cost factors and methods involved."
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He too did not deny the possibility of another outbreak in the same regions.
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Vijay Kumar, commissioner in the animal husbandry department, however, said that they followed WHO norms and MPCB had given them a clean chit.
"We followed the WHO norms. In fact the MPCB officials came and checked and were satisfied with the culling and disposal procedures. The disposals were carried out in the presence of central officials," Kumar said.
But Boralkar alleged that the department had culled the chickens and buried them.
"The chickens ideally should have been incinerated but they were buried that too inside bags which further delayed degradation," he said.
Poultry litter remains the main concern of MPCB. "Poultry litter is the carrier of the virus and composting is yet to be done," Boralkar warned.
(Source: IANS)