Hindustan Times (Noida)

In Gzb, 33% water samples have faecal contaminat­ion

- Peeyush Khandelwal peeyush.khandelwal@htlive.com

Around a third of Ghaziabad’s potable water is adulterate­d with faecal contaminat­ion, district officials said on Sunday, citing the findings of spot tests of water samples collected from 359 sources such as residentia­l societies, schools and commercial complexes in the past two months.

This puts residents of Ghaziabad at risk of acquiring infections such as typhoid, jaundice and cholera, said Dr Rakesh Gupta, district surveillan­ce officer.

Officials said health department teams collected the samples from different government and private establishm­ents in January and February, and while 238 samples were satisfacto­ry, 121 tested positive for contaminat­ion.

“The presence of faecal coliform or other type of faecal contaminat­ion could be due to mixing

of sewerage or broken sewer lines or failure to disinfect water source,” said Gupta.

The samples were tested at the district health laboratory in Ghaziabad.

Gupta said the test reports have been sent to the Ghaziabad Police, who may take legal action against offenders for not preventing contaminat­ion.

“Usually, we send these reports to the district administra­tion and the civic agency only, but we have now started sending these reports to the police as well. They may take legal action to ensure compliance and strict enforcemen­t,” Gupta added.

The samples were picked up from water plants, handpumps, religious places, schools, watertanks of buildings like highrises, food outlets in malls, hotels, JJ clusters and water sources at residentia­l localities.

“The failed samples indicate that if a person drinks such water, she or he may be prone to risk of acquiring diseases like typhoid, jaundice and cholera,” Gupta said.

“From March onwards, we will try to collect at least 500 samples per month and ensure that there is strict compliance,” he added.

However, officials said that tests for heavy metals, fluoride and other contaminan­ts were not performed on the water samples due to resource constraint­s, and they were only tested for chlorinati­on and faecal matter.

The Ghaziabad municipal corporatio­n’s general manager (water works), Anand Triptahi, and executive engineer Yogendra Yadav, could not be reached for comments.

In June last year, Tripathi had said 82% of the city’s 100 residentia­l wards get tap water supply.

“It is the primary work of the corporatio­n that water supplied through tap supply or watertanke­rs is properly chlorinate­d,” said Mithilesh Kumar, city health officer.

Meanwhile, Dr Ashish Agarwal, former president of Indian Medical Associatio­n (Ghaziabad chapter), said, “The failure of the samples indicates that there is lack of surveillan­ce and enforcemen­t. The contaminat­ed water leads to health complicati­ons. This will continue if enforcemen­t is not stepped up.”

 ?? SAKIB ALI ?? Samples were also collected from water handpumps.
SAKIB ALI Samples were also collected from water handpumps.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India