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Police to help hunt hidden poultry
- 7-day mop-up ahead

Feb. 3: Police will accompany animal resource development officials during the weeklong mop-up operations and search houses for hidden poultry if necessary.

“Police teams will accompany officials during the mop-up, which will continue for seven days,” animal resource principal secretary Dilip Chakraborty said at Writers’ Buildings this afternoon.

Inspector-general, law and order, Raj Kanojia said he had already asked the police chiefs of the bird flu-hit districts to help animal resource officials locate ducks and chickens that had not been handed over to the rapid response teams during culling operations.

“The policemen will search out chickens and ducks if they are asked to do so by the animal resource officials. They will not act on their own,” he added.

The mop-up job began today, without police help at most places.

Animal resource officials were hopeful that their campaign against holding back poultry birds in the flu pockets would bear fruit.

“A door-to-door campaign has shown tremendous impact. Many villagers who had earlier hidden their chickens have changed their minds. We are giving them compensation (for culled birds) if they are co-operating with our officials and handing over their chickens and ducks before the mop-up,” animal resource minister Anisur Rahman said.

The minister said the police would intervene when the villagers refuse to part with their chickens even after much persuasion.

“It will be the last resort. Our officials will tell people to hand over their chickens before asking the police to conduct a search inside houses.”

The minister knows police action might leave the villagers, going to panchayat polls this summer, angry.

The CPM was singed in many areas of rural Bengal last year for corruption among ration dealers and their alleged collusion with the party.

A CPM leader in Birbhum said: “We are opposed to policemen searching for chickens in village houses.”

Animal resource department teams today went door to door in four village panchayat areas of Rampurhat in Birbhum, about 270km from Calcutta, requesting villagers to give away the poultry birds they may have kept back.

“Many villagers handed over their chickens and ducks today. No police help was req-uired,” said Birbhum animal resource head Narayan Das Bhowmik.

Secretary Chakraborty said 32 lakh chickens had been culled till Saturday. “Fresh culling began today in Jibantala village of Canning block II in South 24-Parganas, where the avian influenza was confirmed yesterday.”

The Centre has asked for details of the rehabilitation package under which the state government has promised Rs 500 to each affected family in addition to the compensation for the culled birds.

“We have asked district magistrates to send the list of beneficiaries at the earliest so that it can be endorsed by the central government. Once the Centre okays the scheme, we shall start distributing the compensation,” Chakraborty said.

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