GENEVA -- The human death toll from the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu reached 103 after five people died from the disease in Azerbaijan, the World Health Organization said Tuesday.\nWHO said seven of 11 patients from Azerbaijan had tested positive for H5N1 in samples checked at a major laboratory in Britain. Five of those cases were fatal.\nThe sources of infection were still under investigation, but officials suspected a connection to the feathers of dead swans.\n"The majority of cases have occurred in females between the ages of 15 and 20 years," WHO said. "In this community, the defeathering of birds is a task usually undertaken by adolescent girls and young women."\nSo far, there was no indication of direct exposure to dead or diseased poultry in some of the cases. That has been the usual source of exposure for humans who caught bird flu.\nHealth officials fear the virus could mutate into a version that could easily be transmitted between people, potentially triggering a global pandemic.\nMeanwhile, tests confirmed that the H5N1 strain has spread to Pakistan, the government said.\nThe Agriculture Ministry said British lab tests were conducted on chickens from two farms in northwestern Pakistan. The deadly virus was detected in each, supporting Pakistani lab tests, the ministry said.\nThe H5N1 virus has killed or forced the slaughter of tens of millions of chickens and ducks across Asia since 2003. It has spread more recently with migrating birds to Europe, Africa and the Middle East.
Deadly bird flu claims 5 lives in Azerbaijan
Officials suspect connections to dead swan feathers
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