The whole of densely populated Java, however, remains affected.
While it is widely known that 30 of Indonesia’s 33 provinces have reported outbreaks of
avian influenza, 14 of these have reported no new cases in the past six months, and 21 of the total have never had a human infection.
Bayu Krisnamurthi, head of the Indonesian national committee on avian influenza control and pandemic influenza preparedness said, “We are always striving against the problem, of course big challenges remain in provinces that are not free [of bird flu] especially those with a high density ratio of population and fowl.â€
Bird flu has now killed 151 people in nine countries since 2003, according to
figures from the World Health Organisation (WHO). Scientists fear the virus could mutate into a form that can be passed easily between people, leading to a possible human pandemic which could kill millions.