Title: PESTICIDE ACTION NETWORK ASIA AND THE PACIFIC
1PESTICIDE ACTION NETWORK ASIA AND THE PACIFIC
- Workshop on Development of Legal and
Institutional Infrastructure Chemicals - (SAICM)
Implementation, Bangkok, 23-25 May, 2007
2OUR VISION
- Our vision is a society that is truly
democratic, equal, just, culturally diverse, and
based on food sovereignty, gender justice and
environmental sustainability. -
3PAN ASIA AND THE PACIFIC Regional Network
- Represented in
- 15 countries in Asia and the Pacific
- 110 network partners
- 300 participants
4Pesticide Action Network (PAN)
- Pesticide Action Network founded in 1982 with
over 600 network participants working towards the
reduction and elimination of hazardous pesticides
and the promotion of ecological agriculture and
alternatives to pesticides. - PAN International network is coordinated through
five regional coordinating centres - PAN Africa in Dakar, Senegal
- PAN Asia and the Pacific (PAN AP) in Penang,
Malaysia - PAN Europe in London, UK
- PAN Latin America (RAP-AL) in Palmira, Colombia
- PAN North America in San Francisco, U.S.A
5Pesticides are used in conditions of poverty
- Many susceptible workers pregnant women, very
young / old workers, unhealthy workers, low
literacy rates - Importance of PPE Awareness? Availability?
Affordability? Wearability? - No washing facilities in field limited household
washing facilities
Photo Catherina Wesseling, Costa Rica
Photo Francois Meienberg, Pakistan
6Typical conditions of use
- Poor (no) spray equipment nozzles cleared by
blowing - Many pesticide users know that pesticides are
hazardous (product stewardship) but no major
breakthrough in changing behavior and practices - Registration of pesticides in developing
countries shortage of regulators and
inspectors check data rather than carry out risk
evaluation - Product quality, repackaging, adulteration, sales
strategies - Pesticides are valuable No lockable storage
facilities storage in house - Poor product information pesticides for one crop
(e.g. cotton) used on others (e.g. cowpea) - Self medication Clinics and hospitals remote
first aid training limited
7Mixing and Spraying of Pesticides
8Picture from Sumatra, Indonesia
9Repackaged pesticides
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12Improper Disposal of Pesticide Containers
13Community Monitoring
- PAN works to build stronger linkages with
affected communities and peoples movements to
strengthen their struggle - CPAM - PANs community monitoring methodologies
are pioneering a community documentation, action
and organising. Tool for community support and
action. - Documenting and recording of poisoning incidents
has increased
Victim of Pesticide Poisoning that caused Huge
Lump on the Throat
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15Community monitoring
Barren Village of Kamukaan, Philippines
- Ban of paraquat in Malaysia
- Ban of endosulfan in Kerala, India
- Kamukaan pressure on banana plantation and
alternative livelihoods - Eloor community near a DDT plant in Kerala
- Ongoing documentation of pesticide problems in 8
countries in Asia and more are being planned
Pesticide Sprayer With a Knapsack Equipment
16Case study Paraquat Threats to health
- Paraquat is highly acutely toxic enters the
body mainly by swallowing, or through damaged
skin, but may also be inhaled - 1 teaspoon of concentrated paraquat can result in
death - Death is by respiratory failure may occur
within a few days after poisoning or as long as a
month later - There is no antidote!
- Paraquat damages the lungs, heart, kidneys,
adrenal glands, central nervous system, liver,
muscles spleen, causing multi-organ failure - Severe acute long-term health problems include
severe dermatitis, second degree burns,
nosebleeds, rapid heart rate, kidney failure,
respiratory failure - Some chronic effects identified include
developmental reproductive effects links to
skin cancer Parkinsons disease
17Problems in Malaysia
Mixing the Pesticides with the Bare Hands
Women Sprayers in the Estates
- Women are the major workforce on plantations in
Malaysia - around 30,000 women workers - They routinely mix, handle spray pesticides,
are poisoned by pesticides (mostly herbicides)
they spray daily - Women have suffered a myriad of serious acute
chronic health effects
18Community Based Pesticides Monitoring
- Involvement of the Malaysian National Poisons
Centre in the report, activities by Tenaganita
PAN AP - Malaysian Pesticide Board also concerned about
the pesticide - Paraquat banned in Malaysia in August 2002
- 1999- 2001 - PAN AP Tenaganita (Womens
Force) work with women plantation workers on
community based pesticides monitoring to assess
health impacts
- Poisoned and Silenced launched in 2001,
identified paraquat as a main offender in palm
oil plantations, recommendations made for it to
be banned along with all WHO Class 1 pesticides
- But since ban, Syngenta and
- MPOA has undertaken various activities to
overturn the ban - Malaysian Pesticides Board stands firm to ban.
- The industry approaches appeals to the highest
levels of political leadership
19Malaysian Ban Under Threat
- April 15, 2005 - Malaysian govt plan to
reconsider paraquat ban - Agriculture Agro-Based Industries Ministry
decides on review after presentations made by
small-holders key industry players - April 20, 2005 - PAN AP, Tenaganita over 20
women plantation workers go to Malaysian
Parliament to lobby MPs Press Conference held - "We will struggle and continue our fight to keep
the ban on paraquat! states Nagamah, women
plantation workers leader - Minister responds, decision on lifting ban left
to Pesticides board - PAN AP launches world-wide appeal to Malaysian
Government to keep paraquat ban - A further extension of paraquats use till 2007
is announced.
20Case study Endosulfan in Kerala
- In 1979, a farmer in Kasargod realised that
endosulfan could have caused the deformed limbs
and stunted growth of his 3 calves and alerted
the village. - The Plantation Corporation of Kerala (PCK) in the
1970s had started aerial spraying of pesticides
particularly endosulfan to control tea mosquito
bugs. - In 1994 KSSP undertook a study that showed that
disability rate of people in the area was 73
higher than overall disability rates for the
entire state - In 1997, a local medical doctor found large
number of unusual diseases among his patients and
wrote to the Indian Medical Association. - As the health complaints mounted, a local
agricultural assistant found her son was
depressed and her daughter was suffering hormonal
problems and together with others appealed before
the local court for a stay on aerial spray. The
court issued a stay order. - Thanal and SEEK separately undertook two fact
finding mission reported incidence of similar
diseases in the villages. This was followed by a
long-term monitoring of the area in 1999.
Mentally and Physically Challenged Children of
Kasargod
Shruti was Born with Three Deformed Limbs
21Kasargod a long struggle for justice
- In 2000, the Government school also recorded in
its internal report that most students coming
from the areas around the plantation were
observed to be mentally and physically deficient
compared to students coming from other areas. - In October 2000, a local court ordered the
permanent prohibition of use of any insecticide
by air in the Periya plantation area. - CSE from New Delhi undertook laboratory analysis
of blood, water and other samples and the
analysis showed the presence of endosulfan. - Studies and counter studies PCK had a private
lab to analyze samples but they did not find any
elevated endosulfan levels - The Kerala Agriculture University asked an expert
committee to investigate and found that even
though there were problems related to nervous
system in some families that there is no evidence
to show endosulfan as the cause - Kerala than lifted the ban in 2002
- A large-scale epidemiology study in the area
started in 2001 by the National Institute of
Medical Research found high prevalence of
nuero-behavioural disorders, congenital
malformation in female children and abnormalities
related to the male reproductive system had no
other cause but the continuous aerial spraying of
endosulfan. - 2003, endosulfan spraying was permanently stopped
following the directions of the Kerala High
Court, based on the precautionary principle. - The Chief Minister of the state decided to uphold
the ban on endosulfan in 2004 and in 2006 the
Chief Minister of Kerala, Mr V S Achutanandan
provided compensation to the survivors.
22PANs Policy Work in the UN
- Rotterdam Convention on Prior Informed Consent
(PIC) on Certain Hazardous Chemicals in
International Trade - Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic
Pollutants (POPs) - International Code of Conduct on the distribution
and Use of pesticides - Intergovernmental Forum on Chemical Safety
- The Strategic Approach to International Chemicals
Management (SAICM)
23Alternatives
- Advancing Agroecological strategies of
agricultural production, their success in
reducing health and environmental harm while
maintaining yields, and related economic benefits - PAN focuses on
- Rice and ecological agriculture
- Implementation of Farmer Field Schools IPM
- Agroecological promotion in other crops
- Commodity supply chains eg. Palm oil (RSPO)
- Alternatives to pesticide in homes
24Sustainable (Ecological) Agriculture successful
and ensures food security
- Gita Pertiwi and Field outreach to 10,000
families in Indonesia - 20,000 farmers practising LIESA and 50,000
farmers involved in Save our Rice Campaign with
Thanal in India - Alternative Agriculture network in Thailand (AAN)
- SIBAT and SEARICE in the Philippines
- SHISUKs rice-fish cultivation a model for
poverty alleviation
25Save Our Rice Campaign
- Five Pillars of Rice Wisdom
- - Food sovereignty
- Safe Food
- Culture
- Biodiversity based Ecological Agriculture
- Community Wisdom
26Role of civil society
- Creating awareness
- Supporting local struggles
- Building capacity to participate and asserting
rights of people through - Strengthen local communities technical capacities
- Providing technical support
- Assisting documentation and highlighting the
problems - Alerting public and relevant agencies and
organisations - Providing recommendations
- Watchdog role
- Providing alternatives where possible
27BARRIERS to CSO participation
- THE LACK OF
- Democratic spaces -- mechanisms to ensure
participation and consultation - Political will to ensure participation
- Freedom of information
- Press Freedom
- Complex relationships with the industry including
political support to chemical industry - Accountability and
- Transparency (right to know)
28- Confrontation
- Criminalisation
- In April, 1993, Hoechst slapped a law suit on
Dr. Romy Quijano, a toxicologist and a pesticides
and human rights activist, for criticising a
Hoechst product, Thiodan (endosulfan). - Legal suits
- Madhumita Dutta ,an environmental activist -
received legal summons to appear before a court
in Warangal, Andhra Pradesh for publishing an
investigation on acute pesticide poisoning in the
district. The case filed by the pesticide
industry association, Crop Care Federation.
29Systematic synergies/collaboration with other
regional and international networks
- IPEN (International POPs Elimination Network)
- GAIA
- PCFS Peoples Coalition on Food Sovereignty
- APC Asian Peasants Coalition
- CAWI Coalition of Agricultural Workers
- Committee of Women Workers (CAW)
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