The Borneo Post

China admits pollution-linked ‘cancer villages’

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BEIJING: China's environmen­t ministry has acknowledg­ed the existence of ' cancer villages', several years after widespread speculatio­n first began that polluted areas were seeing a higher incidence of the disease.

The use of the term in an official report, thought to be unpreceden­ted, comes as authoritie­s face growing discontent over industrial waste, hazardous smog and other environmen­tal and health consequenc­es after years of rapid developmen­t.

“Poisonous and harmful chemical materials have brought about many water and atmosphere emergencie­s... certain places are even seeing ‘cancer villages',” said a five-year plan that was highlighte­d this week.

The report did not elaborate on the phenomenon, which has no technical definition but gained prominence in domestic and foreign media after a Chinese journalist posted a map in 2009 pinpointin­g dozens of such ‘cancer villages'.

But the ministry acknowledg­ed that in general China uses “poisonous and harmful chemical products” that are banned in developed countries and “pose long-term or potential harm to human health and the ecology”.

Environmen­tal lawyer Wang Canfa, who runs an aid centre in Beijing for victims of pollution, said Friday it was the first time the ‘cancer village' phrase had appeared in a ministry document.

“It shows that the environmen­t ministry has acknowledg­ed that pollution has led to people getting cancer,” he said.

“It shows that this issue, of environmen­tal pollution leading to health damages, has drawn attention.” — AFP

 ??  ?? POLLUTION PROBLEM: Chinese multimilli­onaire Chen Guangbiao (centre) speaks to the media as people representi­ng companies, which Chen claims pollute the environmen­t, pose in front of discarded fireworks packaging, during an event organised by Chen to publicly ‘shame’ them and promote awareness on air pollution, in Nanjing, Jiangsu province. —Reuters photo
POLLUTION PROBLEM: Chinese multimilli­onaire Chen Guangbiao (centre) speaks to the media as people representi­ng companies, which Chen claims pollute the environmen­t, pose in front of discarded fireworks packaging, during an event organised by Chen to publicly ‘shame’ them and promote awareness on air pollution, in Nanjing, Jiangsu province. —Reuters photo

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