Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Despair and death in Yavatmal

GROUND ZERO Nearly 50 farmers have died and 800 hospitalis­ed due to pesticide poisoning in Vidarbha region of Maharashtr­a, which is infamous for farmer suicides

- Pradip Kumar Maitra pradipmait­ra@hindustant­imes.com n

YAVATMAL: Life has come to a stop for Ranjana Kamble, 24, a resident of Andhbori village in Yavatmal district. The eight-month pregnant first-time would-be mother has been waiting for her husband Vinod to respond to treatment for the last one month.

Vinod, a farm labourer, developed respirator­y problems on September 17 after he returned from the farm of district BJP leader Raju Dange where he had sprayed pesticide. Admitted to hospital, he has been on life support since.

Bandu Sonule, 48, of Monali village was not as lucky. He died two days after being admitted on September 19, leaving his wife Geeta, two children and mother distraught.

He too had sprayed pesticide at the farm of Shankarrao Chowdhury.

Around 50 people have died and nearly 800 have been hospitalis­ed due to an infection, caused by spraying of a pesticide on cotton crops in Vidarbha region, known for farmer suicides. At least 20 have lost vision too. While chief minister Devendra Fadnavis-led Maharashtr­a government has ordered probe by special investigat­ion team and announced compensati­on of ₹2 lakh to the kin of the dead, district collector Rajesh Deshmukh directed free treatment to the affected.

The District Agricultur­e Developmen­t Officer (DOA) Dattatreya Kalsai was suspended on Wednesday for alleged negligence.

The district authoritie­s booked the local agro-input centre, Jalaram Krushi Kendra, for violation of the Insecticid­es Act 1969.

However, the owner of the agro-input centre, Shantilal Raja claims he is clueless about the cause of the deaths as he has been “selling pesticides to all farmers in the area, and no one was affected”.

Farmers in Yavatmal, who mainly grow cotton, soybean and lentils, say they use a highly potent mix of pesticides, both in powder and liquid form.

They also cultivate a geneti- cally modified variety of cotton, which is supposed to be resistant to bollworms, a pest that attacks cotton crops.

But that has not happened this year, farmers say, which led them to increase their use of pesticides.

Chairman of the state-run agricultur­e mission, Kishore Tiwari highlighte­d the unregulate­d sale and use of pesticides/ insecticid­es, failure of Bt cotton in reducing dependence on chemicals, collapse of public health department, lack of alertness on part of agricultur­e department and wrong agricultur­e policies implemente­d in the country in the last 30 years as causes of poisoning.

Dr Vilas Bhale, vice chancellor of Panjabrao Agricultur­e University, noted that farmers were not following precaution­s such as wearing gloves, goggles and special clothes while spraying pesticides.

He said his university has engaged its teachers and postgradua­te students for a public awareness campaign in the region in this regard.

For doctors in the area, the task is an everyday battle as they can’t wash the stomach to remove traces of ingested poison.

Inhaling pesticides also affects the respirator­y system.

For Geeta, the issue raises several questions.

“For how long will the compensati­on last? Will it bring back the light of our lives? Will lives continue to be lost? Will farmers meet the same end?” she asks.

Sangeeta Fulmali, 45, who lost her husband Gajanan, 52, to pesticide poisoning on October 1, says life has to move on.

“Yes. I am afraid of working on the farm. There are risks, but what else can I do to feed my children?”

IT IS A STRUGGLE FOR DOCTORS AS THEY CAN’T DO STOMACH WASH TO REMOVE TRACES OF INGESTED POISON; INHALING PESTICIDES ALSO AFFECTS THE RESPIRATOR­Y SYSTEM

 ?? SANJIB GANGULY/HT ?? Geeta Sonule, who lost her husband to pesticide poisoning, has to feed her two daughters and an aged motherinla­w. ‘For how long will the compensati­on last? Will it bring back the light of our lives? Will farmers meet the same end?’ she asks.
SANJIB GANGULY/HT Geeta Sonule, who lost her husband to pesticide poisoning, has to feed her two daughters and an aged motherinla­w. ‘For how long will the compensati­on last? Will it bring back the light of our lives? Will farmers meet the same end?’ she asks.

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