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H7N9 virus
China

China poultry cull urged to halt spread of bird flu

As study links H7N9 virus to chickens, expert says mainland wet markets are 'smoking gun'

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A woman handles chickens at a market stall. Photo: Felix Wong
Emily Tsangin Hong KongandStephen Chenin Beijing

A leading researcher has called for live-bird markets in H7N9-hit areas of the mainland to be closed and poultry culled to block the deadly virus' spread, as a study confirmed wet markets to be the "smoking gun" in the spread of the disease.

A report in The Lancet medical journal yesterday provided the first evidence that the new flu virus in human infections is 99.4 per cent related genetically to that found in live chickens.

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Jiangxi province yesterday became the eighth region, and the first bordering Guangdong, to report a confirmed case of the flu.

The Jiangxi provincial government said it would strengthen the monitoring of poultry but insisted there was no need to close markets or cull birds.

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Some mainland cities, however, have already shut markets at the first sign of an infection.

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