Seeking to widen his government's  campaign against Endosulfan, Kerala Chief Minister V S Achuthanandan has  written to his counterparts in other states requesting them to bring  combined pressure on the Centre to impose a nationwide ban on the  pesticide. 
Ahead of a Kerala  'hartal' on Friday called by ruling CPI(M)-led LDF on the Endosulfan  issue, Achuthanandan, in his letter, highlighted the ill-effects due to  use of the pesticide over the years in Kerala's Kasargode district where  over 400 people died and hundreds were suffering from serious health  problems. 
He also attached  copies of reports of studies on the death and environmental devastation  caused by Endosulfan spraying over the years in a state-run cashew  estate in Kasargode. 
The 87-year-old  CPI-M leader, who recently observed a day-long fast on the issue, wanted  his counterparts to prevail upon the Centre to ask for global ban on  Endosulfan at the ongoing Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic  Pollutants. 
Realising the grim danger posed by the  pesticide to living beings and nature, it had been banned by 80  countries but the UPA Government at the Centre was still reluctant to  take action, Achuthanandan said. 
He said there was no  need for further studies to establish the grievous consequences of  Endosulfan as the experience of Kerala had sufficiently brought out that  aspect. 
An all-party delegation from Kerala had met Prime Minister Manmohan Singh recently to press the demand for ban of Endosulfan.
State of endosulfan 
It is called the mango city. But of late, Muthalamada panchayat in  Kerala’s Palakkad district has gained notoriety for excessive use of  endosulfan in its mango orchards. Its effect is showing on people living  there. 
When seven-year-old Sharanya was born, her parents Rukmini and  Chandran were relieved the baby was normal. In the eighth month of  pregnancy, the doctor had warned them that fluid had entered the baby’s  brain. Rukmini’s joy of having a normal baby was short-lived. Sharanya  developed cerebral meningitis on the 28th day. Her head began to swell.  She was diagnosed suffering from hydrocephalus—a condition caused by  abnormal accumulation of cerebrospinal fluid.
Sharanya can talk, rather mumble, and can sit only with support. She  is the latest suspected endosulfan victim. Her condition is similar to  that of children in Kasaragod where the Plantation Corporation of Kerala  aerially sprayed endosulfan on the cashew plantations for over two  decades, leading to serious health problems (see ‘Children of  Endosulfan’, Down To Earth, February 28, 2001).
Till last year, Sharanya’s parents were living in a mango orchard.  Palakkad district has nearly 4,000 hectares (ha) of mango orchards along  the Nelliampathy hills. The district health authority surveyed 9,000  house-  holds in Muthalamada and Kollengode panchayats in November this  year and identified 46 suspected endosulfan victims; four other children  were found suffering from hydrocephalus like Sharanya.
What was more alarming was that 33 of these victims were in the 0-14  age group. The emergence of health problems coincides with intense  spraying of endosulfan that started 14 years ago. The survey was  prompted by protests that followed a pro-endosulfan statement made by  Union minister of state for agriculture, K V Thomas (see ‘Relief for  Endosulfan Victims’, Down To Earth, December 15 ). District medical  officer Rose Thomas said it was a quick survey, not a scientific study.
Butterflies gave indication
 The actual number of victims is much higher than what the district  survey shows, said S Guruvayurappan, coordinator (south India) of the  non-profit Wildlife Protection Society of India (WPSI). In Muthalamada  alone there are at least 250 endosulfan victims, he said. Butterflies  gave Guruvayurappan the first clue on the impact of pesticides. 
He reported thousands of butterflies, including schedule 1 species,  were dying every day in the mango orchards due to excessive use of  pesticides, including endosulfan. “Muthalamada is a part of Palghat gap  (pass) in the Western Ghats and a major migratory route of wildlife,  including butterflies. The pesticide use in this area makes the place a  graveyard for the wildlife and its ecosystem,” wrote Guruvayurappan in a  letter to the forest and agriculture departments and the chief minister  in 2005. “We got reports of reptile and monkey deaths and dogs, goats  and cows giving birth to young ones with twisted limbs,” he said.
The next year the Calicut University Teacher Education Centre, the  nonprofit Environment Protection Group and WPSI conducted a detailed  study of 550 families in Muthalamada. Researchers found members of 174  families had serious health problems. Many children were found suffering  from birth deformities, cancer, cerebral palsy, mental disorders, skin  diseases, vision loss; many women were found infertile. The recent  government survey also mentions the same disorders, but admits lower  incidence.
Why ban not effective
Endosulfan was banned in Kerala in 2005 after the Centre issued a  gazette notification withholding the use of endosulfan in the state, on  the basis of reports of the National Institute of Occupational Health  and other committees. But that ban has been ineffective. Nearly 300  landholders of Palakkad who own big plantations in the region use  endosulfan and other pesticides extensively during the flowering season  to kill pests—leaf miners and leaf hoppers.
Endosulfan is easily available across the district borders in Tamil  Nadu where it is not banned. The border check posts are manned by the  police, excise officers and commercial tax personnel. “We neither have  orders from senior officers nor the expertise to check for pesticides.  Checking private vehicles and buses is restricted,” said K Narayanan, a  commercial tax official at Meenakshipuram check post that borders  Muthalamada.
The district magistrate has initiated steps to curb entry of  endosulfan through the border by forming a mobile squad which started  work on December 1. The squad, headed by an assistant director of the  agriculture department, has met with little success. “We conducted raids  at a few pesticide depots but did not find endosulfan. The pesticide is  brought in containers without labels and is sold loose. So it is  difficult to find the culprits,” said Mohan Kumar, district magistrate  of Palakkad. 
When the Down To Earth team checked endosulfan availability in one of  the agrochemical shops across the border near the Meenakshipuram check  post, the shop owner removed two large containers labelled Endocin (an  endosulfan brand) from the counter and stood in the way, barring entry.  He refused to tell who his clients were or names of the pesticides he  sold.
Residents said agents brought pesticides into Kerala and sold them to  plantation workers. Endosulfan is the cheapest among them. It costs  less than Rs 100 a litre; one litre is enough for an acre (0.4 ha). The  spraying begins in January and is done manually by farm workers without  protective gear.
“Unlike Kasaragod where helicopters were used to spray endosulfan,  here the pesticide is sprayed on individual trees with nozzles directed  skywards. The person spraying gets affected directly,” said C R  Neelakan-dan, environmentalist in Kozhikode.
The farm labourers live within the orchards or in colonies close by.  Shaktivel, a 10-year-old in Ambedkar Colony in Muthalamada, often  crosses the barbed wire fence next to his house to pluck mangoes and eat  them. The boy suffers from psoriasis—a non-contagious skin condition  that leads to thickening of skin. The exact cause of Shaktivel’s  psoriasis is not known, though genetic predisposition and environmental  factors are known to trigger the condition. The boy’s mother has been  diagnosed with leprosy. Shaktivel’s 13-year-old sister was diagnosed  with a tumour in the back, a month ago. His father is a farm worker.
Incidence of such health problems is high but people are unaware  these could be caused by endosulfan. Most labourers are from scheduled  tribes such as Eravallan and Malassar. Murugeshan of Adivasi Protection  Committee, a people’s forum, is now persuading labourers.
“We have asked them to look for new jobs if contractors force them to  use endosulfan,” Murugeshan said. He succeeded in getting one farm  worker to quit job after his contractor insisted he use endosulfan.
The organic route
The pesticide is a known carcinogen, neurotoxin and genotoxin  (damages DNA); the Insecticides Act of 1968 recommends restricted use of  endosulfan. The Stockholm Convention, a global treaty to protect human  health and environment from such chemical compounds, has declared  endosulfan a persistent organic pollutant and 73 countries have banned  its use. A handful of countries like India, China and Israel, however,  oppose its ban (see ‘India still in endosulfan denial’, Down To Earth,  November 15, 2010).
The Kerala government has been pressing the Centre to impose a  country- wide ban on the pesticide. But its own track record hasn’t been  impressive. Worse, the 2011 farm guide, circulated by the state  agriculture ministry last month, recommended endosulfan use as a part of  best practices package. “Someone was careless enough to send the old  brochure for reprint; that officer has been removed,” said A Jayathilak,  additional secretary for agriculture.
On November 19, the state pollution control board announced a ban on  endosulfan under the Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act of  1974 and the Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act of 1981 after  it found endosulfan in water and sediment samples in the Shiriya river  in Kasaragod; anyone violating the ban could land in jail for up to six  years and pay fine. “The latest notification shows the earlier ban was  not taken seriously,” said Jayakumar of Thanal, a non-profit. 
The ban was followed by an announcement by state agriculture minister  M Retnakaran on December 3. He said all licences to red (extremely  toxic) and yellow (highly toxic) label pesticides will be withdrawn in  Kasaragod. These include endosulfan, monocrotophos, furidan and phorate.
Under its organic farming policy, Kerala wants to convert to organic  farming in the next 10 years and withdrawing licences in Kasaragod is  the first step. But these initiatives are not enough. “The neighbouring  states of Karnataka and Tamil Nadu also need to ban the pesticides we  ban. Otherwise, they will be brought in through the porous borders,”  said Jayathilak.
The Centre’s stand on endosulfan is still unclear. In December, the  agriculture ministry organised a three-day seminar on agriculture  development which was sponsored by pesticide companies who also produce  endosulfan.
 
 

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