Sri Lanka seeks to control pesticide use to prevent poisonings
A matter of grave concern in Sri Lanka is the number of people
who are poisoned each year by pesticides. In fact, fatalities from pesticide
poisoning are believed to be among the highest in the world. In 1983, there were
2 010 deaths among 16 649 recorded cases of pesticide poisonings. In 1984 there
were 16 085 cases and 2 250 persons died, a very high figure for a population of
16 million. Pesticide poisonings, in tact, rank third among causes of death in
Sri Lanka, after heart ailments and accidents.
These figures were compiled from hospital records. But, says Dr
Ravindra Fernando, director-designate of the proposed National Poisons
Information Centre, there may be a further 1000 to 2000 pesticide fatalities
each year not recorded by hospitals. In addition, he says, many more people who
are poisoned by pesticides do not even seek hospital treatment. One of the
responsibilities of the Poisons Centre, when it has been established, will be to
collect more precise data on the number of pesticide poisoning cases on the
island.
What is already known, however, is that the vast majority of
deaths caused by pesticide poisoning are not due to agricultural activities or
other occupational hazards. Dr Fernando reports that 74 per cent of all
pesticide fatalities are suicides, only 18 per cent are in the agricultural
field, and 8 per cent are due to accidental poisoning. The suicides are mainly
young people, 77 per cent of them under 30. They are the lovelorn, the
frustrated, the depressed and neurotic' the failures and the dropouts, the
disappointed and angry young people.
For the most trivial reasons, these young people impulsively
reach out for the container of pesticide that is found in most village homes.
Newspapers record such incidents as a matter of course, but they happen so
frequently that it is no longer news. One of the main reasons for the high rate
of poisoning is the easy availability of insecticides. Until recently, almost
anyone could buy any pesticide over the counter.
The Control of Pesticides Act of 1980 attempted to bring
availability, import, local formulation, transport, distribution, storage, and
use of pesticides under strict supervision. In reality, however, there has been
little control; some of the most hazardous of toxic chemicals were imported or
formulated in the country and sold through aggressive advertising campaigns.
Some unscrupulous manufacturers have mixed classes of chemicals, like
organophosphates, organochlorines, and caromates, with the result that doctors
find it nearly impossible to save the lives of the poisoned because the
antidotes for one class of chemicals could be fatal for the other.
Dr Nalino de Alwis, the newly appointed Registrar of Pesticides
under the Act, says that the country has made a beginning in the control of the
use and abuse of pesticides. But her unit, which functions under the Ministry of
Agriculture, needs a much wider infrastructure for policing, monitoring,
research, analysing quality, testing for residues, registering of dealers, and
other tasks. One of the circumstances that have led to the sharp increase in
severe poisoning and fatalities, she says, apart from easy availability, is the
fact that the Government has banned the agricultural use of relatively less
toxic chemicals like malathion and frenothion, setting these aside for vector
control, on the premise that widespread use of the same pesticide in both
agriculture and vector control over long periods will contribute to the
development of pest resistance to pesticides. As a result, the pesticides now
reserved for agricultural uses are of the more toxic variety.
The Registrar of Pesticides has now begun to register all
dealers, who must record all stocks and sales, and sell only to bona fide
farmers. Dealers are being invited by agricultural officials to participate in
training courses; if they don't cooperate, their licences may be cancelled and
supply firms may be requested to strike their names from the customer lists. The
firms are very cooperative, says Dr de Alwis.
An approved list of agro-chemicals has been gazetted. Imports of
these compounds can be made only with the written approval of the Registrar of
Pesticides. Imports of such very toxic chemicals as parathion, aldrin,
heptachlor, BHC, and dieldrin are no longer permitted. Other highly toxic or
carcinogenic compounds, such as methonyl, moncrotophos, or paraquat, have been
placed on a severely restricted list and are banned for agricultural uses. They
are used only by trained personnel in the Department of Agriculture, in the
research institutes, forestry, the Ports Authority, and pest control services.
Dr de Alwis maintains that Sri Lankan pesticide legislation is
comprehensive, but acknowledges that there is a need for more infrastructure and
financial support. However, the biggest problem, in her view, is to educate
farmers. Sri Lanka farmers seem to believe that if they soak their crops with
insecticides they will get better results. A survey by the Central Agricultural
Research Institute revealed that 60 per cent of all farmers used more than the
recommended dosages for pesticides. Many also ignore regulations under the Act
stipulating the minimum interval allowed between last spraying and harvesting.
According to Dr J. Jeyaratnam, who undertook research into pesticide poisonings
in the early 1980s for the Department of Community Medicine at the University of
Colombo, farmers do not take the simplest precautions. They were found to use
leaking knapsacks; sometimes they sprayed bare-bodied and often against the
wind. They did not change their clothes or wash themselves properly after
spraying.
Realizing that education is a key weapon for control and
management of pesticide use in agricultural applications, the Department of
Agriculture's Education Division provides training for both staff and farmers.
Sri Lanka is also participating with six other South and Southeast Asian
countries in FAO's intercountry programme for integrated pest control in rice.
Mallika
Wanigasundara