Bird flu poses risk of pandemic worse than COVID, France’s Institut Pasteur says

Researchers wearing protective suit work during a press visit at the Institut Pasteur in Paris, France. (Reuters)
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Updated 27 November 2025
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Bird flu poses risk of pandemic worse than COVID, France’s Institut Pasteur says

  • The highly pathogenic avian influenza has led to the culling of hundreds of millions of birds in the past few years, disrupting food supplies and driving up prices, though human infections remain rare

PARIS: The bird flu virus that has been spreading among wild birds, poultry and mammals could lead to a pandemic worse than COVID-19 if the virus mutates to transmit between humans, the head of France’s Institut Pasteur respiratory infections center said.
The highly pathogenic avian influenza, commonly called bird flu, has led to the culling of hundreds of millions of birds in the past few years, disrupting food supplies and driving up prices, though human infections remain rare.
“What we fear is the virus adapting to mammals, and particularly to humans, becoming capable of human-to-human transmission, and that virus would be a pandemic virus,” Marie-Anne Rameix-Welti, medical director at the Institut Pasteur’s respiratory infections center, told Reuters.
The Institut Pasteur was among the first European labs to develop and share COVID-19 detection tests, making protocols available to the World Health Organization and labs worldwide.

NO ANTIBODIES AGAINST H5 BIRD FLU
People have antibodies against common H1 and H3 seasonal flu, but none against the H5 bird flu affecting birds and mammals, like they had none against COVID-19, she said.
And unlike COVID-19, which mainly affects vulnerable people, flu viruses can also kill healthy individuals, including children, Rameix-Welti said.
“A bird flu pandemic would probably be quite severe, potentially even more severe than the pandemic we experienced,” she said in her Paris laboratory.
There have been many cases of people infected by H5 bird flu viruses in the past, including the H5N1 currently circulating among poultry and dairy cows in the US, but these were often in close contact with infected animals. A first ever human case of H5N5 appeared in the US state of Washington this month. The man, who had underlying conditions, died last week.
In its latest report on bird flu, the WHO said there had been nearly 1,000 outbreaks in humans between 2003 and 2025 — mainly in Egypt, Indonesia and Vietnam, of which 48 percent had died.

HUMAN PANDEMIC RISK STILL LOW
However, the risk of a human pandemic developing remains low, Gregorio Torres, head of the Science Department at the World Organization for Animal Health, told Reuters.
“We need to be prepared to respond early enough. But for the time being, you can happily walk in the forest, eat chicken and eggs and enjoy your life. The pandemic risk is a possibility. But in terms of probability, it’s still very low,” he said.
Rameix-Welti also said that if bird flu was to mutate to be able to be transmitted between humans, the world was better prepared than it was before the COVID-19 pandemic.
“The positive point with flu, compared to COVID, is we have specific preventative measures in place. We have vaccine candidates ready and know how to manufacture a vaccine quickly,” she said.
“We also have stocks of specific antivirals, that, in principle, would be effective against this avian influenza virus,” she added.


Hong Kong plans to buy homes devastated in deadly high-rise fire

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Hong Kong plans to buy homes devastated in deadly high-rise fire

HONG KONG: Hong Kong proposes to spend about HK$4 billion ($512 million) to buy ​out the owners of homes in a high-rise housing complex ravaged by a massive fire that killed more than 160 in November, authorities said on Saturday.
The prices offered ‌will be HK$8,000 ‌per sq. ​ft. ‌without ⁠a land ​premium payment, ⁠and HK$10,500 per sq. ft for those receiving such a payment, officials in the Asian financial hub told a media briefing.
“We believe the proposed ⁠price is sufficient for ‌the affected ‌residents to relocate and ​secure long-term ‌housing,” said Wong Wai-lun, Hong ‌Kong’s deputy financial secretary.
The government also offered an apartment exchange program for the 4,600 affected tenants, who ‌lived in nearly 2,000 housing units at the complex, ⁠Wang ⁠Fuk Court.
The total outlay, estimated at HK$6.8 billion, will drop by HK$2.8 billion from a contribution by a relief fund, and could go lower still after insurance compensation in factored in, the officials said. ($1=7.8148 Hong Kong dollars)