http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/15/AR2006041501088.htmlKABUL, Afghanistan -- Raising chickens has always been women's work in Afghanistan, and in the past several years this backyard occupation has brought new independence and income to thousands of illiterate war widows who have few other ways to earn a living.
So when avian flu was detected here six months ago, and several cases of its virulent H5N1 strain confirmed by U.N. experts in March, ripples of rumor and panic coursed through the loosely organized groups of widows in greater Kabul who raise some of Afghanistan's estimated 12.1 million chickens and sell their eggs for 2 cents apiece.
For some, the first impulse was to hide, sell or destroy their hand-raised flocks. But in just a few weeks, radio ads, nonprofit groups and a roving corps of Afghan women trained by the United Nations as bird flu "sentinels" have taught the widows how to protect their chickens and themselves from catching the deadly ailment
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"We tried dozens of income-generating ideas for widows, from tailoring to bakeries, and this one has worked the best," Barker said. "Most widows have no access to land or capital, so they can't raise large animals like cows. Poultry has been such a great fit, so bird flu was a potentially devastating blow."
At a meeting of widows in Charai Qamber last week, it was clear that avian flu was a deadly serious topic. Half a dozen women said that without selling eggs, they could not buy laundry soap, salt or school supplies for their children. Halfway through the meeting, another woman arrived, looking nervous and holding up a sick chicken in a plastic bag. It was immediately examined and vaccinated, and she visibly relaxed.
good news for these women's survival and ability to make a living.