2006 H5N1 outbreak in India

An outbreak of the H5N1 virus in India in 2006 negatively affected the people living in the area, as the poultry industry was their main source of income at the time.[1] Soon after many birds were reported dead in the village of Navapur, in the Nandurbar district of Maharashtra, the government intervened, first confirming the presence of the bird flu and then destroying numerous birds to control the spread of the virus. Residents felt the government overreacted, believing the government had wrongly attributed the reason for the bird deaths; had unnecessarily disrupted their main source of income; and did not compensate them properly for the government's destruction of the birds. Residents also believed that the media caused unnecessary panic over the incident. The government denied any over-reaction to the flu outbreak and stated that they had enough Tamiflu vaccine to protect the Indian population.

  1. ^ Malik, Yashpal Singh; Singh, Raj Kumar; Dhama, Kuldeep (23 September 2020). Animal-Origin Viral Zoonoses. Springer Nature. p. 116. ISBN 978-981-15-2651-0.

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