PARIS
(Reuters) - The European Union's health and foreign ministers should meet soon
to coordinate their reaction to the spreading bird flu virus, France's Foreign
Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy said on Tuesday.
Douste-Blazy's call for a meeting
came after the European Commission banned all imports of live birds and feathers
from Turkey into the 25-nation EU on Monday after Ankara confirmed an outbreak
of the highly contagious avian influenza.
"We can see that the H5N1 virus,
this bird flu virus, is spreading and is arriving at our doors," Douste-Blazy
told France 2 television.
Turkey
and Romania reported new cases of the virus on Saturday and began culling
thousands of birds to prevent the globally feared disease from spreading.
Experts there are yet to discover
whether the cases are from the highly pathogenic H5N1 virus, which has killed
millions of birds and 65 people in Asia since 2003. Officials have played down
the likelihood.
"We must take a certain number of
measures, particularly towards countries which are affected by this bird flu at
the moment," Douste-Blazy said.
"There must be a meeting by the
European Union's health ministers and foreign ministers soon, so as to be able
to harmonise our reaction," said Douste-Blazy, a doctor, who was France's health
minister before taking on his current job.
European Commission health and
consumer protection spokesman Philip Tod said EU health ministers were meeting
informally on October 20-21.
"The flu pandemic preparedness plan
is one of the items on the agenda," he said.
Experts fear the virus could mutate
in the future into one that spreads easily between humans, creating a pandemic
with the potential to kill millions of people worldwide.
The European Commission has said it
was taking no steps at the moment over a suspected outbreak of bird flu in
Romania.
EU veterinary officers from the
25-nation bloc will meet in Brussels on Wednesday when the results of bird flu
tests in Romania and Turkey should be known. They can decide further trade
restrictions and tougher EU action.
Bulgarian authorities said on
Tuesday they were testing three birds found dead in the northern part of the
country for avian flu but said so far there were no indications the deadly virus
had reached the country.