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Firm Masters greens make life hard on golf's finest
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Defending champ McIlroy shares Masters lead after back-nine birdie run
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Tigers' Meadows in hospital after colliding with teammate
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US to host Israel-Lebanon talks as strikes threaten Iran ceasefire
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'Scrappy' McIlroy leans on experience for share of Masters lead
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Ukraine and Russia will cease fire for Orthodox Easter
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Mateta inspires Palace win over Fiorentina in Conference League
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Pioneering US hip-hop artist Afrika Bambaataa dies at 68
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Russia bans Nobel-winning rights group, raids independent newspaper, in one day
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Watkins propels Villa towards Europa League semis, Forest hold Porto
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Aston Villa on verge of Europa League semis after beating Bologna
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Venezuela police clash with protesters demanding salary rises
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CAF president rejects corruption claims by Senegal
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Israel and Lebanon set for ceasefire talks next week, says US official
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US stocks extend gains, shrugging off ceasefire worries
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IMF chief urges nations to 'do no harm' in fiscal response to Iran war
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Sixers' Embiid to have surgery for appendicitis - team
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Russian police raid independent Novaya Gazeta outlet, reporter detained
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Former heavyweight king Fury adamant 'I've still got it' as Makhmudov awaits
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Shipping toll for Hormuz passage sharply divides nations
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McIlroy's back-nine birdie run grabs share of Masters lead
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Melania Trump blasts 'lies' linking her to Epstein
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'Anxious' Tatum back at Madison Square Garden with NBA East second seed on line
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Melania Trump denies any links to Epstein abuse
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American Airlines targets April 30 return to Venezuela
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Venezuela police tear-gas protesters demanding salary rises
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Robertson to leave Liverpool at end of season
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Choudhary smashes Lucknow to dramatic IPL win over Kolkata
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Sean 'Diddy' Combs asks US appeals court to overturn sentence
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France's Macron in Rome for first meeting with Pope Leo
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Angola name former Senegal boss Cisse as new coach
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Sinner and Alcaraz wobble but advance to Monte Carlo quarter-finals
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Reed soars to early Masters lead on wings of eagles
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US Democrats fail in bid to curb Trump's Iran war powers
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Veteran prop Slimani to return to France with Toulon
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Iranians pay tribute to slain supreme leader weeks after killing
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Russian police raid independent Novaya Gazeta media outlet
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Barton Snow completes Cheltenham-Aintree double in Foxhunters Chase
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IMF to cut global growth forecast due to Mideast war
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Jihadists kill Nigerian troops including senior brigadier general
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Local boy Aranburu sprints to Basque Country stage, Seixas extends lead
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Russia brands Nobel Prize-winning rights group Memorial 'extremist'
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England set for World Cup warm-up friendlies in Florida heat
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Sabalenka pulls out of Stuttgart Open with injury
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BTS kick off world tour with spectacular South Korea show
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UK animal charity rescues over 250 dogs from single home
New strain of bird flu confirmed in US
A new strain of bird flu has been confirmed at a duck farm in California, the first time the variant has been discovered in poultry in the United States, an international agency said.
A report by the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH), which AFP saw on Tuesday, said "highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5N9" had been confirmed in a commercial duck premise in Merced County, California.
"This is the first confirmed case of HPAI H5N9 in poultry in the United States," said Paris-based WOAH, which monitors animal diseases worldwide.
It said the outbreak, whose origin was unknown, was confirmed on January 13 and all 119,000 poultry at the farm in question had been culled.
The H5N1 strain of bird flu, which is widespread among animals in the United States, was also registered at the farm.
US animal health officials were conducting "comprehensive epidemiological investigations" and had increased surveillance in response to the outbreak, the WOAH said.
The emergence of the new strain of bird flu in the United States comes at a time when President Donald Trump has decided to withdraw the country from the World Health Organization (WHO).
The US is the largest donor to the United Nations health agency, which coordinates the worldwide response to health emergencies.
Health experts have been sounding the alarm about the potential pandemic threat to humans posed by bird flu, which has been showing signs of mutating as it spreads among cows and infects people in the United States.
They have for months been urging US authorities to increase surveillance and share more information about its bird flu outbreak.
If the US and the WHO no longer cooperate and share critical data, tracking the spread of viruses internationally will be more difficult.
The US withdrawal is "a concern for global health", the WHO said last week.
Sixty-seven people in the United States have contracted bird flu, one of whom died in early January, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said this week.
These cases were caused by direct exposure to a sick animal and the WHO has stressed that, to date, no human-to-human transmission has been reported.
But scientists have raised fears that if a person becomes infected with both bird flu and seasonal flu, the bird flu virus could mutate into a strain that is contagious between humans and potentially trigger a human pandemic.
L.Durand--AMWN