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Bangladesh on alert as anthrax
spreads
Bangladesh has put livestock
and health officials on high
alert after an outbreak of anthrax
spread to more districts, infecting
327 people since mid-August,
officials said Sunday.
The livestock minister suspended
all leave and sent teams to
the affected districts, department
deputy director Mosaddek Hossain
said.
The move comes after health
officials confirmed that anthrax
has infected people in two more
districts in the country's north
and east, taking the tally to
five districts. Outbreaks in
two more districts await confirmation.
"This is the biggest outbreak
of anthrax in the country's
history. We are very concerned.
The government has set up surveillance
teams in all the affected areas
so that the disease cannot spread
to other places," Hossain
said.
Scores of cows have died in
the outbreak, causing panic
among farmers.
The situation has been aggravated
by eating and handling of diseased
cows by farmers, he said.
Anthrax is a potentially lethal
bacterium that exists naturally
in the soil and commonly infects
livestock which ingest or inhale
its spores while grazing. It
can be transmitted to humans
who handle or eat infected animals.
Mahmudur Rahman, a director
of health ministry, said 327
people have been infected with
the disease since August 18.
All the cases are cutaneous,
or skin, anthrax which causes
wound-like lesions.
"We are battling hard
to contain the disease. Still,
we are receiving reports of
new infections in almost every
day," he said.