Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play. Advertisement Egyptian pig farmers have clashed with police in Cairo, as they tried to stop their animals being slaughtered. Hundreds of people at the Manshiyat Nasr slum threw stones and bottles at police who responded with tear gas and rubber bullets. The government wants to cull all the nation's pigs, a move UN experts say is not necessary to prevent swine flu. Egypt's pigs mostly belong to the Coptic Christian minority who say the cull has reignited religious tensions. The authorities initially said the pig cull was a precaution against swine flu but now describe as a general public health measure. There have been no cases of swine flu reported in Egypt. In Mexico, where the global swine flu outbreak started, the authorities said it could be stabilising. Overreaction charge Mexican Health Minister Jose Angel Cordova said the country was seeing fewer cases every day. CONFIRMED CASES Mexico: 101 suspected deaths - 19 confirmed US: One death, 160 confirmed cases New Zealand: 4 confirmed cases Canada: 85 confirmed cases Spain: 20 confirmed cases UK: 16 confirmed cases Germany: 6 confirmed cases Israel: 3 confirmed cases France: 2 confirmed cases Netherlands, Switzerland, Austria, Denmark, Hong Kong, South Korea, Italy, Irish Republic, Costa Rica, Colombia: 1 confirmed case Countries with confirmed cases of secondary transmission: Mexico, US, Canada, Spain, Germany, UK

Mapping the outbreak Swine flu nations make trade plea Did Mexico over-react to flu? Globally more than 700 people are known to be infected. Person-to-person transmission has been confirmed in six countries. But in cases outside Mexico, the effects of the virus do not appear to be severe. There are estimated to be more than 300,000 pigs in Egypt, but the World Health Organisation says there is no evidence there of the animals transmitting swine flu to humans. Pig-farming and consumption is concentrated in Egypt's Coptic Christian minority, estimated at 10% of the population. Many are reared in slum areas by rubbish collectors who use the pigs to dispose of organic waste. They say the cull will harm their businesses and has renewed tensions with Egypt's Muslim majority. On Saturday, health officials began the slaughter in earnest, moving in on a Cairo slum where rubbish collectors are said to keep around 60,000 pigs. The slaughter is expected to take around a month. Officials now say the cull is aimed at bringing order to the country's pig-rearing industry, so that in future animals are not reared on rubbish tips but on proper farms. The government has been criticised for overreacting to the threat, but it was also criticised for responding too slowly to the bird flu crisis two years ago. When bird flu appeared in the country in 2006 mass culls were carried out but at least 22 humans died from the disease.



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