Hong Kong today reported its third death from H7N9 bird flu -- an elderly man who had visited mainland China -- a day after authorities culled 22,000 birds to curb the disease.
The 75-year-old man had previously travelled to the neighbouring Chinese city of Shenzhen and died today morning, a Department of Health spokesman confirmed to AFP without elaborating.
Fears over avian flu have grown following the deaths of two men from the H7N9 strain of the virus in Hong Kong since December.
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The latest case comes a day after the city culled thousands of birds, mainly chickens, following the discovery of infected poultry imported from the mainland.
Officials wearing masks and protective suits piled dead chickens into black plastic bags yesterday, at Hong Kong's Cheung Sha Wan market where the virus was found.
Cheung Sha Wan -- Hong Kong's only wholesale poultry market --- is now shut for 21 days for disinfection and the sale of live birds in the city has ground to a halt on the eve of the Lunar New Year holiday season.
So far this year, China has confirmed 110 human H7N9 cases including 22 deaths, according to an AFP tally of reports by local authorities.
In the worst-hit province of Zhejiang, three members of the same family contracted the H7N9 strain, the official Xinhua news agency reported late last day.
Hong Kong health authorities said a total of 254 H7N9 cases have been confirmed on the mainland since the outbreak began there in February 2013, sparking fears the virus could mutate to become easily transmissible between people, potentially triggering a pandemic.
An additional four cases have been confirmed in Hong Kong, three of them fatal.