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A view of an illegal oil refinery is seen in Ogoniland outside Port Harcourt in Nigeria's Delta region March 24, 2011. Crude oil thieves -- known locally as "bunkerers" -- have been a fact of life for years in Africa's biggest oil and gas industry, puncturing pipelines and costing Nigeria and foreign oil firms millions of dollars in lost revenues each year. REUTERS/Akintunde Akinleye (NIGERIA - Tags: CRIME LAW ENERGY)

Nigeria's oil thieves

Nigeria is Africa's largest crude oil exporter but its production capacity has been slashed by thieves drilling into pipelines.  Slideshow 

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Life in an Amazon tribe

A look at life in the Brazilian Amazon basin with the Yawalapiti tribe.  Slideshow 

Japan says it will keep stockpiling Tamiflu

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TOKYO | Tue Mar 27, 2007 12:36pm EDT

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan plans to keep stockpiling the Tamiflu anti-viral drug to tackle any future bird flu pandemic, even though it has warned doctors not to give the drug to teenagers, a Health Ministry official said on Tuesday.

The decision on stockpiling was made at a meeting of experts on Monday, the official said.

Japan plans to store enough doses within the next year to treat 25 million patients and to prevent 3 million people from being infected with the H5N1 avian flu virus.

The virus has swept through poultry across Asia to Africa and Europe. Experts believe it could mutate into a form that would easily pass from one person to another, killing tens of millions of people within months.

The Health Ministry said last Wednesday it had ordered the importer of the drug to warn doctors against giving it to teenagers after two new cases of abnormal behavior were reported.

Two teenagers were hurt in February and March by falling from buildings after taking the drug, produced by Swiss firm Roche Holding AG, the ministry said.

A total of 15 young people have been injured or killed in similar incidents since 2004, the ministry said last week, as concern mounted that Tamiflu could induce psychiatric symptoms. Roche has disputed suggestions that its drug is unsafe.

The ministry was quoted by Kyodo news agency late on Tuesday as saying there had been reports of 81 cases of psychiatric or nervous symptoms in children under 10 who had taken Tamiflu in the two years up to last March.

Ministry officials were not available for comment.

Tamiflu is imported into Japan, the world's heaviest user of the drug, by Chugai Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd., a Japanese drug maker half-owned by Roche.

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