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U.S. Donates More Bird Flu Equipment To Armenia

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  • U.S. Donates More Bird Flu Equipment To Armenia

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Feb 23 2007

    U.S. Donates More Bird Flu Equipment To Armenia


    By Ruben Meloyan

    The U.S. government on Friday provided Armenia with laboratory
    equipment and special vehicles which officials said will
    significantly improve veterinary authorities' ability to guard
    against possible outbreaks of bird flu.

    The $300,000 equipment, donated to the Armenian Agriculture
    Ministry's Central Veterinary Laboratory, is part of a $2.6 million
    program implemented by the U.S. Agency for International Development
    (USAID). The one-year aid scheme is aimed at helping Armenia cope
    with the potentially lethal H5N1 virus. In addition to equipment
    supplies, it envisages training of Armenian veterinary officials
    charged with monitoring and controlling the disease.

    `As of today, Armenia has more capabilities [to deal with bird flu]
    that it had before,' the U.S. charge d'affaires in Yerevan, Anthony
    Godfrey, said during an official ceremony.

    `With this equipment we will be able to diagnose the existence of a
    bird flu virus in any place and help people guard against it,' agreed
    Agriculture Minister David Lokian, also present at the ceremony. `It
    will make us feel safer.'

    The equipment transfer came just a week after the World Bank approved
    $2 million in similar assistance to Armenia. The sum will be released
    from a special fund set by eight donor agencies, including the
    European Union, to combat the worldwide spread of avian influenza.
    The World Bank had already disbursed a $6.25 million loan to Yerevan
    for the same purpose last July.

    Armenia is the only country in the region that has not registered any
    cases of H5N1 so far. Neighboring Turkey reported last week another
    more such cases in eastern regions of the country that are not far
    from the Armenian border.

    `I think it would be wrong to dismiss the danger of a bird flu
    outbreak [in Armenia],' Lokian said. `That danger is grave, seeing as
    the bird flu virus has already been detected in all of the
    neighboring states. So we must be ready to quickly detect and
    localize [a possible outbreak].'
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