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JAKARTA - INDONESIA on Wednesday launched a new
three-year plan to fight bird flu, just days after the confirmed death toll topped 100 in the country hardest hit by the H5N1 virus.
The plan will be funded by a US$20 million (S$28.4 million) European Union (EU) grant channelled through the World Health Organisation (WHO), the health ministry's disease control director Nyoman Kandun told reporters here.
Indonesia accounts for just under half of the 224 human bird flu deaths worldwide, according to WHO figures. The 100th victim died on Sunday, and the
101st fatality was recorded on Tuesday.
Mr Kandun said Indonesia would need to meet with EU and WHO officials on a 'routine basis' in order for the plan to work.
WHO's Indonesia representative Subhash Salunke said the strategy would focus on preventing new infections, better monitoring of the spread of the virus and continued scientific research.
'Prevention of new cases remains an urgent priority, while improving survival (rate) of those infected is another major priority,' he said.
The prevention campaign would include ramped up efforts to improve hygiene in the country's wet markets and public awareness initiatives.
'The persistence of H5N1 in Indonesia has serious (global) consequences for health, economies and food security,' Mr Salunke said.
'Out of 33 provinces, in 31 provinces this is an endemic virus ... because it is present in such a vast area, the opportunity for virus and human being
contact is immense,' he added.
The H5N1 virus is typically spread by direct contact between poultry and humans, but there are fears among scientists that the virus could mutate into a form easily transmissible between humans, setting off a worldwide pandemic.
The concern stems from past influenza pandemics. A pandemic in 1918, just after the end of World War I, killed 20 million people worldwide.
101st death A 32-year-old Indonesian man who had tested positive for bird flu has died, a health ministry official said on Wednesday, adding the victim might have picked up the virus from doves in his neighbourhood.
The man, from Tangerang west of Jakarta, died on Tuesday at Jakarta's Persahabatan hospital, said Toto Haryanto from the ministry's bird flu centre.
His death takes the country's toll from the H5N1 bird flu virus to 101.
'He lived only 500 metres away from a flock of doves his neighbour kept as pets. We believe that's where he got the virus,' Mr Haryanto said by telephone.
Contact with sick birds is the most common way of contracting the virus, which is endemic in poultry populations in most of Indonesia.
The country's death toll hit 100 on Monday when two separate laboratory tests confirmed a 23-year-old woman from East Jakarta had died of bird flu.
Not including the latest death, bird flu has killed 223 people in a dozen countries since the virus reappeared in Asia in late 2003, according to World Heatlh Organisation data. -- AFP, REUTERS
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