Khaleej Times

Pesticide linked to Maharashtr­a farmer deaths

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geneva — The Swiss NGO Public Eye called for an export ban on the pesticide Polo, produced by agricultur­e giant Syngenta, implicatin­g it in the death of 20 Indian farmers last year.

Syngenta, bought by ChemChina for $43 billion in 2017 in China’s largest ever foreign takeover, has rejected the allegation­s by Public Eye.

“There is absolutely no evidence to suggest that Syngenta’s product Polo was at all responsibl­e for the incidents that have occurred,” the company said in a statement.

Last September, officials in the western state of Maharashtr­a reported that 20 farmers had died and hundreds of others were in hospital after inhaling poisonous pesticides while spraying crops.

After visiting the affected Yavatmal

region and interviewi­ng farmers and their relatives, Public Eye said there was strong evidence that Polo — specifical­ly its active agent diafenthiu­ron — was responsibl­e for the poisoning.

Public Eye noted that while the evidence was not conclusive, the spraying of Polo was a common link among those who died or fell sick.

The NGO also said farmers in Yavatmal likely inhaled excessive amounts of the insecticid­e last year as cotton plants grew higher than normal, forcing them to spray closer to their mouths.

Officials reportedly opened a criminal investigat­ion targeting Syngenta over the deaths, but the status of the probe is not known.

The European Union banned diafenthiu­ron in 2002. The Swiss government pulled it from the market in 2009 “for reasons of health or environmen­tal protection”, according to official documents.

Syngenta branded Public Eye’s allegation­s “salacious and incorrect”.

In response to the spate of deaths and illnesses, the company said it “conducted stewardshi­p programs in the district and adjoining regions, conducted doctor training programs and establishe­d mobile health clinics to support treatment of farmers who may have been affected.”

Syngenta noted that Polo “has been successful­ly and safely used by Indian Farmers across the country for the last 14 years,” and that diafenthiu­ron is registered in 25 countries worldwide. —

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