Moscow mayor introduces quarantine in 16 city districts amid bird flu outbreak
The quarantine targets the regions with the highest risk factor for spreading the disease
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Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin on Thursday ordered a strict quarantine for multiple districts in Russia’s capital due to an outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza, known as the bird flu.
According to a document published on the mayor's website, the order enacted on May 16 placed 16 of Moscow's 125 districts in quarantine identifying the regions that were at the highest risk for spreading the influenza.
The entire territory neighboring the zone, where the threat of disease spreading exists, has been declared a surveillance zone.
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The quarantine measures include restrictions on resident's access to areas with dead birds, and only allowing necessary employees to enter into the blocked areas. The guidance also prohibits the treatment of sick birds, the import and export of birds, and the relocation and rearrangement of birds.
The highly-pathogenic bird flu, also known as HPAI, is a deadly respiratory virus that affects wild birds and poultry.
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Poultry and other domesticated birds infected with the disease will often show symptoms like a lack of energy, the production of soft-shelled or misshapen eggs, and swollen heads.