Profits
Over People
Damning reports.
Alarming statistics. There’s a strong case against India’s lone DDT manufacturing
facility in Kerala but the plant shows no sign of shutting down
KA SHAJI
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Toxic
shock Lakshmi Kutty lives close to the factory. She has cancer
in one of her eyes, which the doctors say might be due to overexposure
to DDT.
Photos:AK Varun |
I DON’T MAKE my omelette
from local eggs as they smell of pesticide,” says carpenter TV Gireesh
as he stands outside India’s only DDT-manufacturing factory. DDT is a
deadly insecticide banned in most countries. Located 18 km from central
Kerala’s Kochi city, the government-owned factory has long been accused
of severely polluting the environment in the industrial belt where it
is located, affecting human and animal life as well as harming crops and
vegetation. Gireesh is among the increasing number of activists who want
the factory shut down without delay.
The nauseating smell of DDT assaults the
senses as one nears this industrial belt built
around the once small villages of Eloor and
Edayar. There are about 200-odd factories in
the region but it is the DDT factory of the Hindustan
Insecticides Limited (HIL), manufacturing
DDT and Endosulfan since 1956, which has
many of the area’s 40,000 residents up in arms.
There is by now sufficient evidence to show
that water in the village’s wells has become
unfit for drinking and that large tracts of land
are turning uncultivable by the season.
DDT is the most notorious of the 12 chlorinated
chemicals identified for elimination by
the world’s most authoritative agreement on
the subject, the Stockholm Convention of
World Nations on Persistent Organic Pollutants
(POPs). A signatory to the Convention,
India has banned the use of DDT in agriculture.
HIL’s DDT production is thus fully export-oriented:
its client list has eight African countries,
including Namibia, Zimbabwe and Botswana.
International groups like Greenpeace also oppose
DDT production at the factory. An Empowered
Committee set up by the Supreme
Court on environmental issues has also called
for immediate shutdown of the factory.
Environmentalists say the factory has polluted
the local Periyar river. According to a
study by S. Bijoy Nandan of the Central Inland
Fisheries Research Institute, 16 species of fish,
including eels, catfish, goby and cyprinids,
have disappeared from the river. Some 30
more species are threatened; five are classified
as endangered. Located adjacent to a highly
sensitive wetland ecosystem, the HIL plant discharges
effluents in an open creek. A 2006
study by Greenpeace and Britain’s Exeter University
found that water from this creek contained
more than 100 organic compounds, 39
of which, including DDT, were highly toxic.
“DDT and related compounds are of particular
environmental concern,” Greenpeace India activist
Sanjiv Gopal told TEHELKA. “Not only are
they toxic but they are also highly resistant to
degradation and are liable to accumulate.”
Environmentalist CR Neelakandan says besides
its effluent killing birds, frogs and fish, the
pollution from the DDT factory is badly affecting women. According to a health
survey held this year by the Kerala
government, breast cancer and
complications related to reproduction
are increasing in the region.
Says Thankamma Ayyappan,
who lives near the factory and was
diagnosed with breast cancer four
years ago: “Doctors have confirmed
that it was caused by exposure
to DDT. It is cruel of the
government to run a factory that
kills its own people.”
SOME YEARS ago, local
activists commissioned experts from the Occupational Health and Safety
Centre of Mumbai, the National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences
(NIMHANS) of New Delhi and St John’s Medical College of Bangalore to study
the health problems caused by DDT. The report found that in comparison
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| The
HIL facility in Eloor |
to a less polluted
village in the same district, the chances of Eloor’s inhabitants contracting
cancer were 2.8 times higher. Children were at a 2.6 times higher risk
of bodily deformities due to congenital and chromosomal aberrations. Chances
of children dying due to birth defects had increased 3.8 times. Death
from bronchitis was up 3.4 times and from asthma 2.2 times. Air pollution
was 85 percent higher than in Kochi city. Since that report, another study
by the Cochin University of Science and Technology has confirmed the high
prevalence of DDT in locally available milk, fish, chicken and eggs.
But despite the overwhelming
evidence, the government has refused
to consider shutting down
the factory. Activist Purushan
Eloor, campaigning against the
factory for a decade, says: “HIL’s
best option is to produce another
product. But it has taken no R&D
initiative in this regard.” In 2004,
the Supreme Court issued a directive
to state pollution control
boards to ask industries without
environmental and other authorisations
why they should not be
shut down. Following this, the
Kerala State Pollution Control
Board ordered over 100 industrial
units to tighten hazardous waste
disposal, and served closure orders
on 32 units. But the order
made no difference to HIL.
Purushan claims that at a conference called
last year in Senegal to discuss the status of pollution
control as per the Stockholm Convention,
he saw an executive of HIL distribute
copies of a letter addressed to the Convention’s
Secretariat by the Indian National Trade
Union Congress (INTUC), which controls the
HIL workers’ union. The letter stated that DDT
was harmless and claimed no worker associated
with DDT production at the factory had
been diagnosed with health hazards in the past
50 years. Purushan asks, “Why was an HIL official
part of India’s official delegation to a conference
that aims to eliminate the production
and use of DDT?”
INTUC is the major force among the 356 employees
of HIL. The union is supportive of the
management, as it fears job loss for employees
in the event of the factory’s closure. Fearful of
retribution, union members refuse to talk to
outsiders but, speaking on condition that they
not be named, some workers said they continued
to work at the factory because they had no
alternative livelihood.
HIL general manager Venugopalan Nair has
views similar to INTUC’s. “If DDT is harmful,
why has it not affected our employees?” Nair
asked in a chat with TEHELKA. He said the
workers at the factory sleep on DDT bags and
eat near the production unit and yet have
stayed unaffected. But his arguments don’t cut
much ice with the local populace. “We want to
breathe fresh air and drink clean water,” says
local grocer Zakeer Hussain. “People are losing
their health because of the pollution
caused by DDT.” •
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