EDITORIAL: When battered people took on the pesticide industry
by Sunita
Narain
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Today,
I want to tell you a true story of extraordinary courage. The past week, I was
in Kasaragod, a district in Kerala, splendid in beauty and with abundant natural
resources, but destroyed by the toxic chemical, endosulfan. The pesticide was
aerially sprayed over cashew plantations, for some 20 years, in complete
disregard of the fact that there is no demarcation between plantations and human
habitation in this area. It is also a high rainfall region and so, the sprayed
pesticide leached into the ground and flowed downstream. The poison contaminated
water, food and ultimately harmed human beings.
This story is known. But
the personal battles that make up the story of this poisoned land and its
diseased people are not known. More importantly, it is not asked where this
story ends?
Leelakumari Amma is the original heroine of this plot. In
early 1990s, she came to Kasaragod, ironically, as an agriculture scientist,
whose job was to push farmers to use pesticides. Her brother died mysteriously
while she was building her house. But she did not connect the dots and moved in,
only to realise that the pesticide spray was poisoning her land and water. Fish
she put in her well died. She could not open the windows of her house for days
when the helicopter sprayed poison. It eemed a thick cloud was hanging over her
house. She could not breathe and worried about her children. Then she noticed
that many people living close to her seemed diseased— children were born with
deformities and severe neurological problems afflicted
people.
Leelakumari Amma petitioned for help. But received threats from
the Plantation Corporation of Kerala (PCK)—the public sector company, which
owned the cashew lands. In 1998, she filed a case in the local court. The
threats became more venomous. But she did not give up. In 2000, the court
ordered an interim ban on spraying. Some months later, the vehicle she was
travelling in was hit by a truck. Leelakumari Amma lost a leg. She told me that
this was an accident. Maybe, but then maybe not.
About this time, Mohana
Kumar, a doctor practicing in a neighbouring village, wrote to the medical
fraternity about the incidences of abnormality and deformities,but got nowhere.
Shree Padre, a freelance journalist of the area, also decided to write
explaining the plight of people. His email reached Anil Agarwal, director of the
Centre for Science and Environment (CSE), who decided in mid-2000, to send a
team to investigate and collect water, soil and blood samples. The results
showed high levels of endosulfan—proving what was only suspected till then. The
question, still, was what this meant for human health?
The pesticide
industry hit back. It first hired a laboratory to ‘clean up’ the results. When
this failed, it decided to hurt the storytellers. Mohana Kumar was served legal
notices—so many he cannot even count. But hope was not dead. In 2001, the
National Human Rights Commission intervened and asked the Indian Council of
Medical Research for a detailed report. Scientists from the Ahmedabad-based
National Institute of Occupational Health (NIOH) analysed blood samples for
pesticides and concluded there was significantly higher incidence of
abnormalities and diseases in populations exposed to endosulfan as compared to
the control population. Endosulfan's effect on humans was
established.
This study was even more inconvenient to industry. The
investigators were attacked and vilified. A case was filed against the key
scientist, Aruna Dewan, the day she retired from government service. The Centre
set up committee after committee, headed by ‘eminent’ scientists to debunk the
CSE and NIOH reports. This was fought back, at considerable personal cost.
Thanal, a Kerala-based NGO, plays a critical role in research and campaign
against pesticide industry smear and smut. This battle has not been easy. Over
the past 10 years, industry has made it a habit to attack all research and
threaten all scientists.
As a result, it has taken over 15 years for the
truth to be known. Currently, the Kerala government’s ban on endosulfan
prevails. Last year, the Supreme Court banned manufacture and use of the
pesticide in the country. The state has accepted the need to provide
compensation to ‘endosulfan victims’. A part of the compensation money will be
paid by the PCK. Liability has been established.
Much more remains to be
done—from rehabilitating the living to providing specialised health care to the
very ill. Also cleansing traces of endosulfan in Kasaragod's soil, and taking
the district towards organic farming. The stigma of pesticide contamination has
to be wiped clean.
This will happen. I am sure. In the Buds school—seven
special schools for endosulfan victims opened by the district administration—I
saw signs of hope. Some 27 children from Padre and Perle village are enrolled
there. I saw their teacher hold their hands, teach them how to smile, as they
counted and drew flowers. Their laughter filled the room. The physiotherapist
told me he was working hard to make sure these special needs children could
walk. A few steps today, maybe more tomorrow.
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