News from Inter Press
Service.
Bangladesh
Caught Between Diarrhoea Bugs and Arsenic
Report
—
By Naimul Haq
Yet, with a programme
of using simple hand pumps and involving the women in affected communities, Bangladesh has managed to ensure
that 98 percent of its rural population now has access to safe drinking water.
"Despite
widespread arsenic contamination, over 98 percent of the rural population now
has access to safe drinking water," avers Mohammad Nuruzzaman, chief
engineer of the department of public health (DPHE).
"All the 1.3
million hand-pumped tubewells we have installed for the rural population are
arsenic-free. We are constantly monitoring them through regular testing in our
14 regional laboratories," Nuruzzaman told IPS.
Hand pumps access
water that is closer to the surface and has had less time to absorb arsenic.
Also, very deep tube wells that reach water 500 metres below ground level are
usually safe because arsenic deposits at that depth are likely to have been
depleted.
"Through constant
monitoring, we are adapting and improving our approach, but UNICEF will never
be happy until all water supply is made safe from arsenic," Pascal
Villeneuve, representative for the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) in
Bangladesh, told IPS.
UNICEF has special
reason to be anxious about arsenic in groundwater because the U.N. body was
responsible for promoting Bangladesh ’s tube well programme
in the 1950s, which turned disastrous with the discovery of high arsenic
contamination of groundwater in 1993.
"Currently, the Bangladesh government and UNICEF
are partners in implementing the largest hygiene behaviour change programme in
the world," Villeneuve said. "This will ultimately reach 30 million
people and is already reaching 20 million."
Under this programme,
arsenic mitigation is "mainstreamed," Villeneuve explained.
"Communities are being equipped with knowledge and skills to avoid arsenic
poisoning while some 20,000 arsenic-safe water points are to be installed,
reaching over two million people in areas that are most affected."
Nurul Islam, project
director of the programme, told IPS that the role of women is crucial.
"The programme is mainly designed to empower women in 600 affected
communities so that they can make decisions and demand the best options
available."
S.M.A. Rashid,
executive director of the NGO Forum for Drinking Water Supply and Sanitation,
told IPS: "We promote women’s participation in the arsenic mitigation
project and build the capacities of women in affected communities so that the
victims can decide how best to solve their problems."
Rainwater harvesting,
sand filters, traditional dug wells and alternate tube wells are among range of
options on offer with beneficiaries needing to pay just ten percent of the
costs.
Groundwater arsenic
was first discovered in 1993 in the northwestern district of Chaipainawabganj
but the issue remained buried until 1996 when doctors from the Dhaka Community
Hospital (DCH), joined scientists from the School of Environmental Studies
(SOES), Jadavpur University, West Bengal, India, to go public.
Dipankar Chakraborti,
research director at SOES, told IPS: "The government in Bangladesh had thought that
sinking deep tube wells would solve its water problems, but 40 percent of the
wells turned out to be contaminated with arsenic."
Chakraborti, who has
been carrying out tests on hundreds of water samples sent to him from
Bangladesh, said many tube wells in the country still show dangerous levels of
contamination - though the magnitude of the problem is far less than initially
thought.
Arsenic contamination
of groundwater occurs in many parts of the world, including locations in India , Thailand , China , Argentina , Chile and the United States . But nowhere has the
problem been as severe as in Bangladesh .
Arsenic contamination
in Bangladesh was not officially
acknowledged until the World Health Organisation (WHO), UNICEF and the National
Institute of Preventive and Social Medicine jointly conducted a series of tests
in 1995.
The enormity of the
problem emerged as water samples in parts of the country revealed arsenic at
concentrations of 250 parts per billion (ppb), though this is mostly limited to
underground layers between 10 and 150 metres. The U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency deems concentrations exceeding 10 ppb to be toxic.
During the late 1950s,
UNICEF, with the good intention of reducing infant mortality from surface water-borne
diseases, introduced tube well technology. As deaths from diseases such as
cholera and shigella declined, millions of tube wells sprang up across the
country with disastrous consequences.
About 22 percent of
all tube wells in the country are still arsenic contaminated, according to
Mahmud Shamsul Gafur, who works for WHO which once described Bangladesh ’s situation as the
"largest mass poisoning of a population in history."
"From what we
know there are 38,430 patients suffering from various degrees of arsenic
poisoning," Gafur told IPS. "It is commendable that there is now a
massive government-led awareness programme with the close involvement of women
who are the worst sufferers."
Traditionally, in Bangladesh , fetching water is a
woman’s chore. Since the advent of tube wells, women have also taken on the
responsibility of their maintenance and repair.
Arsenic poisoning can
- apart from severely damaging the circulatory and respiratory systems, and
causing kidney, bladder and liver diseases - be disfiguring. Women who suffer
from the typical skin lesions tend to shy away from public gaze.
Arati Karmaker, who
lives in Dakobe village of Khulna district, and has
skin lesions caused by arsenic in drinking water, says she is socially
isolated. This mother of three always wears a full-sleeved blouse and uses a
shawl to cover the disfigurement.
"I opted for a
deep tube well which is safe and can be used by other affected families in my
neighbourhood," she said.
Some experts say
solving Bangladesh ’s arsenic problem
calls for a return to surface water, which is easily treated for microbes by
boiling and does not call for the use of expensive filters. Concentrated
arsenic sludge, the byproduct of filtration, presents another serious problem –
that of safe disposal.
"If we do not
return to using surface water quickly the problem could turn
catastrophic," says Prof. Mahmudur Rahman at the DCH. "By drilling so
many tube wells we disturbed the underground environment and put ourselves in
this crisis."
But surface water
sources in densely populated Bangladesh have been drying up
and half of the country's original 300 rivers have vanished. For now, the best
option is still the simple hand-operated pump and constant vigil for arsenic
contamination by women in the communities.
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