France orders poultry lockdown due to bird flu risk

(FILES) In this file photo taken on February 22, 2017 in Bourriot-Bergonce, western France, shows ducks confined at a farm located some 10 kilometres away from the flu-hit southwestern area. – French farmers will have to confine their poultry, as the risk of bird flu has been raised to “high” in mainland France due to the multiplication of cases in neighboring countries, according to a decree published on November 5, 2021 in the Journal officiel. (Photo by GEORGES GOBET / AFP)

PARIS, France (AFP) — French farmers were ordered Friday to keep their poultry indoors due to the heightened risk of bird flu being spread by migratory birds.

The order published in the French official journal follows a similar measure adopted in the Netherlands last week after a case of the highly-contagious H5 strain of bird flu was discovered on a poultry farm and 36,000 birds were slaughtered as a protective measure.

“The rising infection rate in migratory corridors justifies raising the risk level” for all of metropolitan France to “high”, said the order.

The French agricultural ministry said separately that 130 outbreaks of bird flu in wild fowl and farm poultry have been discovered since August in Europe.

So far no cases have been found among professional poultry farmers in France.

The French government hopes that the lockdown will help avoid a repeat of last year, when bird flu was found in nearly 500 locations, severely disrupting the production of foie gras from ducks in southwestern France.

© Agence France-Presse

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