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Revealed: the secret No 10 plan to tackle bird flu food shortages (U.K. News.telegraph)

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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/04/09/nflu09.xml & sSheet=/news/2006/04/09/ixnewstop.html NOTE: the link to Your view: are you worried about bird flu? ---all the hype doesn't seem to have had much impact on the Brits-they are not buying---clk on it and read some of the responses--many are hilarious---they aren't daffy; their government is....a few that made me laugh are excerpted------- I'm not worried.I don't eat raw swan meat. I noticed the bird flu story with the police guarding Cellardyke harbour. Surely this job is more suited to the RAF? Given the `flexibility` with the truth that emanates from Parliament it`s difficult to form any opinion worth having. Will it be bird flu that kills me or the lies from our representatives? As I understand it, this disease has killed a total of 100 people around the entire world so far. How many have died from regular flu? Flu is with us anyway, so what's the fuss? In my opinion the press is making a pig's breakfast out of the whole thing. I'm not worried, I live in the States and we all know these borders are as tight as a drum, not even a budgie could get in here!! But seriously, I would be more concerned about getting hit by a bus than catching bird flu. How many actual human cases have been confirmed, not many in the grand scheme of things, I think there are far worse things to worry about than this one. Compare bird flu deaths to

car wrecks, that puts it into perspective, but I don't see any emergency precautions confiscating cars. There are more people killed on the roads every day than have died in three or more years of bird flu. Come on Blair dig up all the roads and scrap cars, that is the normal knee jerk reaction we expect. Yes I'm worried - I'm worried on behalf of all the chickens, ducks, turkeys, geese etc, that will be confined indoors and subsequently cruelly slaughtered when Defra's alarmist incompetents get to exercise their flabby muscles. I'm also worried on behalf of the poultry farmers who will lose their livelihoods. Other than for those reasons I am not worried at all - hype and hot air is something to which I am impervious. Take care, and beware the needle, UncBob Revealed: the secret No 10 plan to tackle bird flu food shortages By Patrick Hennessy, Political Editor Bird flu 'could kill 100,000 children' Your view: are you worried about bird flu? Emergency plans to tackle widespread

food shortages in the event of a bird flu pandemic are being drawn up by ministers, according to secret Cabinet documents. Off-duty firemen and retired lorry drivers would be pressed into service to ensure that essential food and drink supplies were delivered. Laws that restrict the daily hours of drivers and other vital workers would be suspended. An extract from the secret Cabinet documents The confidential papers - seen by the Sunday Telegraph - show that a serious lack of long-distance- HGV drivers willing to go to infected areas is seen in Whitehall as a potential "pinch point" if avian flu takes a grip.

The papers reveal government concern over a lack of preparation for a pandemic among the biggest food firms. They also show how, in the event of a serious outbreak overseas, the Government will give preventive medicine to embassy and consular staff - but not to British holidaymakers or UK nationals who live in an infected country. The Government fears that any pandemic could last more than six months. The documents say that Whitehall should be on alert for a pandemic on an "extended time-scale - certainly for six months … and perhaps longer". They also suggest "more than one pandemic wave" of bird flu. Senior vet Douglas Gray inspects a dead swan in Aberdeen The documents were drawn up on March 22, a fortnight before a dead swan in a village in Fife was found to have the deadly H5N1 strain of the disease. The swan, which was washed ashore in the village of Cellardyke, had a strain similar to that contracted by 100 birds in Germany. Tests are continuing on hundreds of other dead birds, but none - apart from the swan - has tested positive for H5N1. Fourteen other birds that gave rise to concern tested negative. The documents show a lack of preparedness in Whitehall that ministers and officials are working round the clock to combat. Their disclosure came as the Government was accused of "astonishing complacency" over planning, with farmers angry about confusing advice and the £1.2 billion poultry industry braced for a consumer

backlash. Industry leaders and poultry staff called for vaccinations to protect birds and farm workers, amid claims that the situation was becoming reminiscent of the foot and mouth crisis, which left thousands of animals on giant pyres. The Government papers, which have been discussed by the "Cabinet Committee on Influenza Pandemic Planning", include a blueprint for "managing the response" to a pandemic. Whitehall would go into what officials call a full-scale "battle rhythm" with Tony Blair lined up to take personal charge at an as yet unspecified stage. It is understood that two issues particularly concerning ministers are the difficulties of closing large numbers of schools and the provision of masks to large numbers of people, should the need arise. A Government paper revealed last week suggested that families might have to wait up to four weeks to bury their dead.

Ministers warned that up to 320,000 people could die in a pandemic. The Cabinet documents reveal how the Environment Department fears that no large-scale plans to combat a pandemic have been lined up by big food companies apart from Marks & Spencer - suggesting a chronic lack of preparedness. They add: "HGV drivers had been identified as a potential pinch-point by some sectors. Various mitigation options were being discussed, including using retired drivers or off-duty fire service personnel, and lifting the requirements of the Working Time Directive." An accompanying memo by Lord Triesman, the junior foreign office minister, puts forward an exhaustive plan for coping with a bird flu outbreak abroad. In the event of humans being infected, the document suggests, "we may come under pressure from the media and the British public at home to appear to be doing more for our nationals immediately affected by the virus. In

particular we would hope to deal with the potential sensitivity of providing Tamilflu antiviral treatment for use by overseas mission staff and their dependents diagnosed with the flu virus under our duty of care obligations, but not to British nationals." The document admits that France would supply preventive medicine to its overseas citizens while Britons will be told to fend for themselves. Leader: Labour secrecy 'Astonishing complacency' Organic farmer locks up his hens Bird flu factfile Next story: Bush 'is planning nuclear strikes on Iran's secret sites'Click to join Avian2005 http://health.Avian2005/

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