Bird flu costs Cameroon $20m

File photo: A global epizootic - an epidemic outbreak in animals - of H5N1 bird flu, which emerged in early 2004, led to several cases in humans, of which more than half proved fatal. It also led to the death of tens of million poultry, OIE said.

File photo: A global epizootic - an epidemic outbreak in animals - of H5N1 bird flu, which emerged in early 2004, led to several cases in humans, of which more than half proved fatal. It also led to the death of tens of million poultry, OIE said.

Published Jul 14, 2016

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Johannesburg - The United Nations said Cameroon so far lost $20 million due to an outbreak of bird flu which continues to threaten farmers’ livelihoods after the West African nation became the sixth country in the region to detect the disease.

Poultry farms and markets in Nigeria, Burkina Faso, Niger, Ghana and Ivory Coast have had outbreaks of avian influenza since the H5N1 virus first started spreading 2013, causing the deaths of tens of millions of poultry, according to the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation.

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“We’re looking at a quickly spreading disease that has devastating effects on livelihoods in communities,” Abebe Haile Gabriel, Deputy Regional Representative for Africa at the FAO, said Wednesday in an e-mailed statement.

“A major concern is that the disease may become endemic in the entire region.”

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