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Cancer Village Highlights Chinas Water Woes
Wuli Village, China (AFP) Mar 20, 2006 Wei Dongying dumped 30 plastic bottles from an oversized plastic bag onto her living room floor. "Look at all the different colors: red, black, yellow, brown," said Wei as she picked up the bottles containing samples of water taken from the canals and viaducts surrounding Wuli, a village of 1,500 people in eastern China. "The water used to be clear here. Now look at it. Filthy, undrinkable polluted water." Wei, 38, is a fisherman's wife who became an environmental activist after a personal health scare she believes was related to the intense pollution in the village. In late 2002, Wei discovered two hard lumps on her lymph nodes. "I had them removed and the doctors said it was a 90 percent chance that the problem was related to the environment," said Wei, 38, rolling down her collar to reveal the scar across her throat from the operation. Although her growths proved benign, about 60 other Wuli residents have contracted cancer, including her brother-in-law who died in 1998 at the age of 47. Wuli is described in China's media as being one of the nation's so-called "cancer villages", a legacy of the pollution caused by a chemical industrial park with 25 factories that was set up there in 1992. Located about 220 kilometers (135 miles) southwest of Shanghai along the Qiantang river, it is not just the water that has been degraded but also the air. Gaseous, bitter chemicals assault the nose, lingering on the tongue and itching the throat. The situation in Wuli is a depressingly familiar one around China, especially along China's heavily industrialized eastern beltway where factories take advantage of the natural waterways to expel toxic waste. More than 70 percent of China's rivers and lakes are polluted, while underground water supplies in 90 percent of Chinese cities are contaminated, according to government reports. Chen Weifang, vice chief of the Xiaoshan district environmental bureau that has jurisdiction of Wuli, said one of the main problems was that fines for polluting factories were too low. The factories often discharge their chemicals into the water at night to avoid detection and are happy to pay the fines when they were eventually caught, according to Chen. Corruption involving industry and local government officials is also widely regarded as a major problem, environmental activists say. Meanwhile, on many factory walls in the village, such as the one at the Hangzhou Dazhan Biochemicals Company, are notices calling for the environment to be protected. "Control the pollution in order to survive, protect the environment to develop," the notice reads. "The protection of the environment is everyone's responsibility." Chen said that while the rates of cancer in the village were not higher than surrounding areas, he still believed there could be a link between the pollution and the deadly disease. "To be frank, I think it (Wuli's cancer rate) would be much lower if the village were not polluted," Chen said. The story is disturbingly similar across the border in Jiangsu province, if not worse. In Yixing, a city of more than one million people, water pollution in its townships is so severe that the area has received numerous official visits by top party brass, including Premier Wen Jiabao. Wen admitted at the end of the China annual parliamentary session in Beijing last week that the ruling Communist Party had allowed the unbridled economic expansion of the past two decades to severely damage the nation's environment. "We need to step up our efforts to carry out special environmental and ecological campaigns. ... we need to pay attention to the protection of major waters, air and land," Wen urged. But amid the heightened party worries that China's growth model is environmentally unsustainable, little is being done because immediate economic interests continue to come first, environmental activists say. "The government and industry are connected to each other like a chain, they are inseparable," said Wu Lihong, a local environmental activist in Yixing. "The central government is good but it can't see what's happening here with the local government colluding with the factories."
Source: Agence France-Presse
China Plant Shut Down After Release Of 20 Tonnes Of Waste Water Chongqing Yangzi Powder Metallurgy, in Chongqing municipality, released the waste water into the Qijiang river over a three-hour period early Saturday, the Chongqing Morning Post reported. Local residents awakened to a sickly yellow color on the river and alerted authorities. They, in turn, concluded that this was a deliberate act and have ordered an investigation, according to the paper. Altough the affected river provides drinking water for nearby communities, there was no immediate danger to people due to the downstream location of the plant, according to the paper. China is gradually becoming more alert to the environmental menace posed to its waterways by rapid economic development. A blast ripped through a chemical factory on November 13 in China's northeastern Jilin province, spewing tonnes of toxic benzene into the Songhua river. An 80-kilometer-long (50-mile) slick of benzene surged down the Songhua into the city of Harbin, leaving up to four million people without tap water for days.
Source: Agence France-Presse Related Links - Water Crisis Looms In India As Drilling Depletes Resources New Delhi (AFP) Mar 20, 2006 Each year under the beating summer sun, Indian farmers scan the skies with mounting desperation, waiting for the monsoon clouds to release their deluge and soak the parched land. Even though India is increasingly known for its high-tech prowess, its billion-plus people and economy are still at the mercy of the fickle rains. |
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