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Mystery Toxic Appears In Armenian Food Chain

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  • Mystery Toxic Appears In Armenian Food Chain

    MYSTERY TOXIC APPEARS IN ARMENIAN FOOD CHAIN
    By Arpine Galstian

    Environment News Service
    March 29 2007

    YEREVAN, Armenia, March 28, 2007 (ENS) - Armenian doctors and
    scientists are sounding the alarm after discovering traces of toxic
    substances in patients, including the mothers of young children. Yet
    despite the potential health implications for the Armenian public,
    no one can identify the sources of the problem with any certainty.

    In tests, doctors have found evidence of chlorides which could lead
    to serious medical problems.

    One strong suggestion is that the chemicals have found their way into
    the food chain from pesticides used in farming.

    "Chlorine compounds are present not just in the soil and in water, they
    are also detected in a human biology - in sweat, saliva and mother's
    milk," said Albert Hairepetian, director of Armenia's Institute of
    Environmental Hygiene and Prophylactic Toxicology. "This is just
    unacceptable."

    Organochlorines such as the notorious pesticide DDT were used in
    Armenia until they were banned across the Soviet Union in 1972.

    The poisoning could have come from a residue of DDT still left in the
    ground, but some experts suspect the banned chemical is still being
    used illegally by farmers.

    A worker with an obsolete pesticide eradication program funded by
    the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs finds bags of DDT on an
    Armenian farm. (Photo courtesy Milieukontakt) "We carried out research
    to find out whether the presence of these toxic substances in humans
    was due to the use of DDT in Soviet times," said Lilik Simonian, an
    expert with the organization Armenian Women for Health and a Healthy
    Environment. "We established that there are fresh traces of DDT as
    well as old ones."

    Hairepetian and his colleagues studied milk samples from 40 mothers
    in maternity wards in Yerevan and the town of Ashtarak, and concluded
    that the toxic substances are being passed on to newborn babies.

    This information was not shared with those tested. "It's pointless to
    subject people to unnecessary stress, because at the moment there's
    nothing we can change," said Hairepetian.

    Simonian's group came to similar conclusions when it carried out a
    parallel study in 2004 in 10 villages in the Ararat region south west
    of Yerevan.

    Farms in the Ararat valley, which supply markets in the capital
    Yerevan, are seen as the main source of these toxic pesticides.

    At one Yerevan food market, 37 year old Nora said she heard on the
    television recently that food grown in the Ararat valley may be
    unhealthy. "Now I ask where vegetables come from before I buy them,"
    she said.

    But market trader Gayane said her sales have not suffered from the
    alarming media reports.

    "Sometimes the customers ask where the vegetables come from, but
    later on it all gets forgotten," said Gayane, adding that as she is
    not buying her produce direct from the farmers she doesn't know what
    it contains.

    Of 15 shoppers interviewed at the market, only one of them knew about
    the toxic issue.

    "We breathe such poisonous air that a little bit more poison or a
    little less won't make a lot of difference," said 55 year old Vardges.

    A grocery store in the Armenian capital Yerevan. (Photo courtesy
    Geir Engene) Experts say that the toxic substances involved will be
    discharged from the body naturally, but that they do some damage to
    the nervous and immune systems along the way.

    "There is practically nothing doctors can do about this," said Nune
    Bakunts of the Anti-Epidemiological Institute for Hygiene, run by
    Armenia's Health Ministry. "It's the job of those who own the land.

    "We have to ban the use of toxic chemicals containing chlorine. They
    have been labelled as 'persistent' as they are present in the
    environment for a long time, and now they have entered the human
    organism."

    The Ministry of Agriculture insists that banned pesticides - however
    cheap and effective they may be - are not on sale in Armenia.

    "These [included] the acaricide group which have a sulphur or nitrogen
    base," said Garnik Petrosian, head of the ministry's plant cultivation
    department. "You see we do not use trichlorfon, methyl parathion,
    DNOC or DDT, which are considered dangerous."

    Petrosian said that pesticides are sold only after they had been
    approved by a special licensing commission.

    His words were echoed by Environment Minister Vardan Aivazian, who
    said, "We carry out checks, we question the customs authorities and we
    consistently get the same answer - these substances are not imported
    into the country."

    However, Elizabet Danielian of the World Health Organization's Yerevan
    office suggested that regulation of imports is lax. "Research done by
    various nongovernmental organizations shows that there is no record
    of all the toxic chemicals imported into the country and that we
    don't know what substances they actually contain," she said.

    The environment minister believes the toxic traces may come from
    Soviet-era accumulations of pesticides in the soil, but he said it
    was also possible that villagers still have stores of old chemicals
    left over and may be using them.

    Experts from Armenian Women for Health and a Healthy Environment say
    they have evidence that this is the case. They say chicken farmers
    are using DDT, so toxic substances make their way from the soil into
    the eggs.

    As an alternative to agriculture as the source of the problem, Aivazian
    pointed the finger at two industrial plants as possible suspects -
    the Nairit chloroprene rubber factory and the gold extraction plant
    in the town of Ararat, which uses cyanide as part of the process. He
    also suggested a further possible cause - a toxic waste dump in the
    village of Nurabashen outside Yerevan.

    The Nairit plant was closed in late Soviet times but has since
    reopened. The head of its environmental department said that the
    factory is running at low capacity and there is no evidence it is
    causing any damage.

    {Published in cooperation with the Institute for War and Peace
    Reporting, IWPR. Arpine Galstian is the pseudonym of an Armenian
    journalist. IWPR's Armenia editor Seda Muradian contributed to this
    report.}
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