Hindustan Times (Delhi)

49 Maha farmers in critical condition

- Swapnil Rawal swapnil.rawal@hindustant­imes.com

MUMBAI: Two months after the first death owing to pesticide poisoning — inhalation of the chemical sprayed on crops — in Yavatmal, seven farmers from the region are on ventilator support while two others are in critical condition. The condition of 40 farmers from Akola, Nagpur and Buldhana districts is critical.

In the past two months, 19 people have died of pesticide poisoning in Yavatmal. Twenty-five farmers admitted to the Government Medical College in Yavatmal have lost vision while 800 have been hospitalis­ed with complaints of dizziness, diarrhoea, vomiting, stomachach­e, among others. Most of them are farm labourers who take up the hazardous job of spraying pesticides to earn extra money.

Pesticide poisoning deaths have also been reported in districts of Akola, Amravati, Buldana, Nagpur and Bhandara. Locals, farmer leaders as well as the opposition blamed the Maharashtr­a government for failing to act in time.

Devanand Pawar, a farmer leader from Yavatmal, told HT, “Two farmers are in the intensive care unit (ICU) in critical condition.” Kishore Tiwari, from the Maharashtr­a government-run Vasantrao Naik Sheti Swavlamban Mission (VNSSM), said, “Many patients are in critical condition in the Nagpur Medical College and Akola Medical College. The death toll in these districts could rise.”

Yavatmal district is part of the drought-prone Vidharbha region that registers the highest number of farmer suicides. Dhananjay Munde, leader of Opposition in the Legislativ­e Council, visited Yavatmal on Sunday. “Despite hailing from Vidarbha, CM Devendra Fadnavis neither visited Yavatmal nor did he offer condolence­s to the family of the farmers. Is he so busy,” said Munde.

The Maharashtr­a government recently ordered the additional chief secretary (home) to carry out a probe into the incident and submit a report within 15 days, in addition to another probe into the quality of the pesticides.

“The companies that marketed the unauthoris­ed pesticides will be booked,” Pandurang Fundkar, state agricultur­e minister, told HT.

Fundkar last week admitted the district administra­tion had failed to inform the state government about the cases in Yavatmal. Navnath Kolapkar, superinten­ding agricultur­e officer, Yavatmal, said the pesticides were regular compounds and not a new brand. Farmers in Yavatmal, 670km from Mumbai, primarily grow cotton and lentils and use a highly potent mix of pesticide to save the crop from pests.

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