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Indonesia reports two more bird flu deaths

JAKARTA, Indonesia -- A 3-year-old Indonesian boy has died of bird flu, health officials said Saturday, announcing a second death from the illness in one day.

The two cases, which were apparently unrelated, brought Indonesia’s death toll from the disease to 105.

The latest victim was identified only as Han, a 3-year-old boy from the southern part of the capital, Jakarta, who died Friday at a hospital in the city, radio El-Shinta reported.

Nyoman Kandun, a senior Health Ministry official, confirmed the report but did not provide details.

Laboratory tests confirmed the boy had the dangerous H5N1 strain of the bird flu virus, Kandun said. It was not clear how he was infected.

Earlier Saturday, the Health Ministry said that a 16-year-old Indonesian boy from Central Java province died of bird flu. The boy, whose name was not disclosed, became ill on Feb. 3 with a cough and other respiratory symptoms, according to the Health Ministry’s Web site.

He died a week later in a hospital in the city of Solo, about 450 kilometers (280 miles) southeast of Jakarta, said Sumardi, a ministry spokesman. Like he many Indonesians, he goes by one name.

Tests confirmed the boy had been infected the H5N1 virus, the ministry’s Web site said.

The 16-year-old victim’s neighbors had sick chickens on their property and the boy apparently slaughtered some of them before he became ill, the ministry said.

Indonesia has regularly recorded human deaths from bird flu since the virus began ravaging poultry stocks across Asia in 2003.

Bird flu remains hard for people to catch, but health experts worry the virus could mutate into a form that passes easily among humans, sparking a pandemic. So far, most human cases have been linked to contact with infected birds.

Scientists have warned that Indonesia, which has millions of backyard chickens and poor medical facilities, is a potential hot spot for a global bird flu pandemic.

More than 225 people have died worldwide from the virus, according to the World Health Organization’s Web site.

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