PANUPS: Endosulfan Deaths in Benin

From: PANUPS (panupdates@panna.org)
Date: Tue Jun 13 2000 - 20:37:50 EDT


===========================================
P A N U P S
Pesticide Action Network Updates Service
===========================================
Endosulfan Deaths in Benin

June 13, 2000

Official sources in Benin state that at least 37 people died due to
endosulfan poisoning during the 1999/2000 season in northern Borgou
province. Another 36 were poisoned and became seriously ill. These cases of
death and poisoning can be directly linked to the fact that decisions about
pesticide use in cotton production in the region are made without adequate
consideration of the wider context in which pesticides are managed and used.

Endosulfan, a highly toxic pesticide, is particularly dangerous when used
without proper equipment and protective clothing. A number of countries,
including Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, Belize and Singapore,
have banned the chemical; Colombia and Indonesia are in the process of
banning it. Many other countries severely restrict the use of this chemical.

During the 1999/2000 season, endosulfan was introduced in cotton production
throughout Francophone West Africa as part of a regional program to combat
the American bollworm's resistance to pyrethroids. American bollworm is the
main cotton bollworm pest in West Africa, as is the case in many
cotton-growing countries worldwide. The pest's resistance to pyrethroids was
reported in numerous countries during the 1980s. In West Africa, farmers
first reported the pest's decreasing sensitivity to pyrethroids during the
1996/97 season.

In 1998, national cotton research institutes in West Africa, the French
cotton company CFDT, CIRAD (Centre de coopération Internationale en
Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement) and the Insecticide Resistance
Action Committee (IRAC)* of the Global Crop Protection Federation started a
project to deal with the growing resistance to pyrethroids. A report
produced by the project called for countries in the region to use endosulfan
during the first two sprayings over a period of 40 days, corresponding to
one generation of American bollworm.

In Benin, the cotton research institute supported adoption of this program,
and in early 1999, endosulfan (Callisulfan 350 EC TBV made by the French
company Calliope) was distributed to cotton farmers throughout the country.
The first reports of cotton pesticide poisonings were published in August
and September 1999. The extension service in Borgou claims that 37 people
died in that province between May and September due to Callisulfan use,
while another 36 suffered serious health effects. Deaths and poisonings were
reported from 16 villages in seven out of 12 districts.

Borgou represents approximately 50% of the total cotton growing area of
Benin. If poisonings occurred at the same rate throughout all cotton growing
areas, at least 70 people may have died as a result of endosulfan use.

In one village in Borgou province, three brothers between the ages of 12 and
14 were weeding in their father's field planted with cotton and corn that
had been sprayed with endosulfan the previous day. When they finished their
work, they ate some of the corn. Within 15 minutes, the boys began vomiting.
In spite of being hospitalized, one of the children died.

It is common practice for farmers in Benin to grow other food crops around
cotton fields, to leave voluntarily emerging food crop seedlings in cotton
fields, to spray food stocks and to re-use pesticide containers. Farmers
cannot afford and do not have access to proper protective clothing for
pesticide application, and tend to spray barefoot or in sandals and without
use of safety goggles, gloves, long sleeves or respirators. Men, women and
children, as well as sheep, goats and chickens, can be in the field during
spraying. In addition, many farming families live on diets low in protein
which often results in a higher susceptibility to pesticide poisoning.

Cotton insecticides are virtually the only pesticides available in the rural
area of northern Benin and the only ones delivered on a credit loan basis.
This may account for some of the hazardous uses of the insecticides, such as
on food crops or in storage. In addition, farmers are not adequately
informed about the hazards associated with the products they use.

Such inappropriate uses of cotton pesticides in West Africa are well known
to cotton research institutes and should have been taken into account when
selecting insecticides for large-scale application. The project should
re-examine the problem and invite other stakeholders to participate in the
design, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of strategies to manage
cotton pests, pesticides and pesticide resistance.

* IRAC was formed by the world's agrochemical companies in 1984 to assess
the growing threat of pest resistance around the globe.

Source: Pesticides News 74, March 2000.
Contact: Pesticide Action Network UK, Eurolink Centre, 49 Effra Road, London
SW2 1BZ UK; phone (44-020) 7274 8895; fax (44-020) 7274 9084; email
admin@pan-uk.org; http://www.pan-uk.org.

PANUPS is a weekly email news service providing resource guides and
reporting on pesticide issues that don't always get coverage by the
mainstream media. It's produced by Pesticide Action Network North America, a
non-profit and non-governmental organization working to advance sustainable
alternatives to pesticides worldwide.

You can join our efforts! We gladly accept donations for our work and all
contributions are tax deductible in the United States. Visit our extensive
web site at http://www.panna.org to learn more about getting involved.

===========================================
NOTE: Replies to the sender of this message
will not be read.

To comment, send a message to:
panna@panna.org

To subscribe, send a blank message to:
panups-subscribe@igc.topica.com

To unsubscribe, send a blank message to:
panups-unsubscribe@igc.topica.com

Pesticide Action Network North America (PANNA)
49 Powell St., Suite 500, San Francisco, CA 94102 USA
Phone: (415) 981-1771
Fax: (415) 981-1991
Email: panna@panna.org
Web: http://www.panna.org
===========================================

___________________________________________________________
T O P I C A The Email You Want. http://www.topica.com/t/16
Newsletters, Tips and Discussions on Your Favorite Topics

To Unsubscribe: Email majordomo@cals.ncsu.edu with the command
"unsubscribe sanet-mg". If you receive the digest format, use the command
"unsubscribe sanet-mg-digest".
To Subscribe to Digest: Email majordomo@cals.ncsu.edu with the command
"subscribe sanet-mg-digest".

All messages to sanet-mg are archived at:
http://www.sare.org/san/htdocs/hypermail



This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Mon Jul 03 2000 - 12:00:39 EDT