|
||
January 2015 THAI COMMUNITIES POISONED BY ILLEGAL LEAD MINE WASTE For 16 years the Thai government has ignored the plight of a community where toxic lead mine waste is causing severe chronic poisoning. It's just one of many toxic sites across Thailand that need to be cleaned up – but the government's main concern is to encourage further industrialisation. By The Ecologist The Thai government has failed to clean up toxic lead in a stream in western Thailand, threatening hundreds of families with serious and irreversible health problems, says a new report from Human Rights Watch. A Supreme Administrative Court's order from nearly two years ago to clean up Klity Creek, the first of its kind in Thailand, has been ignored by the government while villagers remain exposed to lead in water, soil, vegetables, and fish. The report, 'Toxic Water, Tainted Justice' by Human Rights Watch, describes 16 years of failure by Thailand's Pollution Control Department and public health authorities to prevent further exposure to lead among the village's ethnic Karen residents, and highlights serious health and environmental damage caused by a now-defunct lead processing factory. Despite the village's idyllic setting, many residents of Lower Klity Creek suffer the symptoms of chronic lead poisoning, such as abdominal pain, headaches, fatigue, and mood changes. Some children have been born with severe intellectual and developmental disabilities. AUTHORITIES ARE 'STILL STUDYING' THE COURT ORDER "The Thai authorities apparently believe they can ignore a clear court order to clean up the toxic site", said Richard Pearshouse, senior researcher at Human Rights Watch and author of the report. "This is one of the most heavily polluted industrial sites in all of Thailand, hundreds of people suffer harm, and it needs immediate government action." On 10 January 2013, Thailand's highest administrative court ordered the government to clean up toxic lead in the creek until test results from the water, soil, vegetables, and aquatic animals in and around the creek fall below permissible levels. Although clean-up activities should have begun by 1 May 2014, Thailand's Pollution Control Department says it is "still studying" how to clean up the creek. Lower Klity Creek villagers may be exposed to lead in their daily lives – by drinking water or eating fish and other aquatic animals, by eating food grown in lead-contaminated plots or cooked in lead-contaminated water, by contact with polluted soil around their houses, or breathing air contaminated by lead dust. The Pollution Control Department's environmental tests found unacceptably high levels of lead in soil along the creek bank, as well as in the water and creek sediment, and contaminating fish, shrimp, crabs, and vegetables at various locations along the creek. MORE LEAD MINES ON THE WAY?
Children who had elevated lead levels did not receive follow-up medical care. Many villagers told Human Rights Watch that public health authorities simply stopped performing local blood tests for lead by 2008. Lead is highly toxic and can interrupt the body's neurological, biological, and cognitive functions. The ingestion of high levels of lead can cause brain, liver, kidney, nerve, and stomach damage as well as anemia, comas, convulsions, and even death. Children and pregnant women are particularly susceptible, and high levels of lead exposure can cause permanent intellectual and developmental disabilities, including reading and learning disabilities, behavioral problems, attention problems, as well as hearing loss and disruption in the development of visual and motor functioning. AS THAILAND PURSUES MINERAL WEALTH, LEGAL OBLIGATIONS IGNORED
These include Na Nong Bong in Loei province (cyanide, mercury, and arsenic), Mao Tao in Tak province (cadmium), Pitchit province (manganese and arsenic), and near the Map Tha Phut industrial area in Rayong province (industrial chemicals).
Thailand's National Health Act also provides that everyone has the
right to a healthy environment. In international law, the rights to
the highest attainable standard of health and to water also entail
the right to an effective remedy for violations of these rights. "A thorough clean-up of Klity Creek could help Thailand create a model for cleaning up the many places where extreme industrial pollution damages human health." – Third World Network Features. -ends-
When reproducing this feature, please credit Third World Network Features and (if applicable) the cooperating magazine or agency involved in the article, and give the byline. Please send us cuttings. And if reproduced on the internet, please send the web link where the article appears to twnet@po.jaring.my. 4190/15
|