Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Bangladesh's toxic legacy
Bangladesh's toxic legacy
Oct 28, 2025 8:56 AM

  Much of Bangladesh's water contains dangerous quantities of arsenic, a toxic compound that cripples human organs and can eventually lead to death.

  The country is now scrambling to reverse what the World Health Organization (WHO) calls "the largest mass poisoning in history", but it will not be an easy task.

  Arsenic was commonly used as a poison in the 19th century, but in Bangladesh, it occurs naturally in the groundwater, which is pumped up by shallow tube wells.

  Millions affected

  No one has the exact figures of the number of wells contaminated with arsenic. But according to Ruhul Haq, Bangladesh's health minister, more than 50 per cent of the population is affected by arsenic contamination - that is more than 80 million poisoned people.

  The country is now facing a growing epidemic from the effects of long-term exposure to arsenic-contaminated water.

  Arsenic poisoning is a slow killer. Apart from skin lesions, its effects are not visible to the naked eye. In recent years, Bangladeshi doctors have recorded a dramatic increase in cancer fatalities.

  Dr Salamat Khandker, a consultant with the WHO, believes that the health impact is underestimated because so many cancer cases go unreported and untreated.

  "We have seen a 25 per cent increase in patients, but these are only patients with visible symptoms," he says.

  "We have not considered the patients who have internal manifestations."

  It is these unseen and unknown cases that are the deadliest. The causes of deaths are predominantly cancer of the bladder or lungs, heart disease, and kidney failure.

  Many Bangladeshi doctors believe that today's cancer patients are victims of decades of exposure to arsenic-contaminated water.

  Costly error

  Bangladeshis have not always relied on wells for their water needs. In the 1970s and 1980s, the United Nations Children's Fund (Unicef) and other development agencies funded the Bangladeshi government to dig shallow tube wells across the country.

  They did so in order to stamp out the incidence of children dying from water-borne diseases found in ponds, which were traditionally used as a source of drinking water.

  The solution seemed simple enough at the time; sink tube wells in every village to provide the population with "clean" drinking water.

  But a grave error was made. Despite it being standard practice across the world, no one bothered to check the ground water for arsenic – and Bangladesh has the highest levels of naturally occurring arsenic in ground water in the world.

  Not only did those leading this project forget to test the ground water, they did not heed warnings from independent scientists and researchers.

  When arsenic poisoning was discovered in the adjoining Indian state of West Bengal in the 1980s, it took years for international aid agencies and the Bangladeshi government to begin tackling the problem.

  They only officially recognized the extent of the arsenic poisoning problem in Bangladesh in 1993. Carel de Rooy, the Unicef country representative calls this "a missed opportunity".

  But according to Quazi Quamruzzaman of the Dhaka Community Hospital, the government was told as early as in 1985 that Bangladeshis crossing the border into West Bengal were being diagnosed with arsenic poisoning.

  Dipankar Chakraborti, the director of Environmental Studies at Jadavpur University in Kolkata, was the first person to warn of the impending arsenic crisis.

  Beginning in 1988, as a young researcher, he began testing water in his native West Bengal, and had them tested for arsenic.

  Reports came back showing that the water had high levels of the toxic compound.

  By the early 90s, Chakraborti had done enough research and testing to realize that the crisis in West Bengal was relatively minor compared to a much bigger calamity across the border in Bangladesh.

  Massive survey

  Now, decades after the first arsenic alerts were sounded, Bangladeshi authorities and Unicef are finally testing the tube wells in order to gauge the extent of the contamination.

  Their task is a daunting one. It will take longer to test all of the tube wells than it took to dig them. Setting up water filter systems or switching to another method of water provision will take much longer.

  Another challenge is in convincing people not to drink the poisonous water. Rick Johnston, a water specialist at Unicef, says that it is hard for villagers to stop using the tube wells.

  "The tube well water is nice and cool. It's easy. So it's hard to switch to something else. There is a pond here, but the pond is dirty; who wants to drink the pond water?," he says.

  "Even if you can build a treatment plant or boil water and make it safe to drink, [people] look at it and they say 'no thanks, we will stick to tube well water'."

  Unicef is subsidizing water filters in arsenic affected areas. But even the cheaper ones cost the equivalent of $30 - a small fortune for most Bangladeshis who earn less then $2 a day.

  In 2008, the Bangladesh government lobbied the United Nations to make access to clean water a basic human right.

  But old habits die hard - tube wells continue to be sunk in Bangladesh.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Bangladeshi children sit on empty water containers as they wait for the supply of water in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Tuesday, May 5, 2009.

  Source: Aljazeera.net

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Displaced people of Syria's "beehive" villages dream of return
  In Aleppo's Jibreen shelter, home to refugees who have been unable or unwilling to return to their houses or flee further afield, the inhabitants of Qalayah, one of the villages from that area, swear they will one day recover their land.   "We raised sheep and had land. We sold everything...
Israel's false narrative on land swaps
  When Israeli opposition leader and Labour Party chairman Isaac Herzog published a plan for kick-starting the peace process last month, one of his stated goals was to "save the settlement blocs" - areas of the West Bank where Israel has built clusters of settlements, including larger towns.   Settlement blocs are...
Syria's Tabqa Dam: a strategic prize
  Syria's vital Tabqa Dam, the country's biggest, has become a major part of a Kurdish-Arab assault to cut off ISIL stronghold of Raqa.   Located in Raqa province, the dam is built on the 2,800-kilometre-long (more than 1,700-mile-long) Euphrates River, which flows from Turkey through northern Syria and east into Iraq....
Israeli torture of Palestinian children 'institutional'
  A recent article published by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz has confirmed the extent to which Shin Bet interrogators subject their prisoners to torture.   Methods include slapping the head "to hurt sensitive organs like the nose, ears, brow and lips", forcing a handcuffed individual to squat against a wall for long...
Idlib overwhelmed by influx of Aleppo's wounded
  When surgeon Mounir Hakimi operated on five-month-old Maram in the Syrian province of Idlib last week, the horrific extent of her injuries quickly became clear.   "She lost both her parents in an air strike, has multiple fractures, a wound in her abdomen, and has lost lots of skin," Hakimi told...
Syria regime hanged 13,000 in Saydnaya prison: Amnesty
  As many as 13,000 people were hanged in five years at a notorious Syrian prison near Damascus, Amnesty International has said, accusing the regime of a "policy of extermination".   Titled "Human Slaughterhouse: Mass hanging and extermination at Saydnaya prison," Amnesty's damning report, released on Tuesday, is based on interviews with...
Afghan refugees return home amid Pakistan crackdown
  Torkham is a maze of chain-link fences and razor wire. Stern-faced Pakistani guards, their rifles loaded and at the ready, watch on as Afghan visitors quietly circumnavigate the multiple checks of their papers at the main border crossing between the two South Asian countries.   Nearby, a group of about two...
Gaza doctor seeks justice in Israeli court
  The walls of Izzeldin Abuelaish's office at the University of Toronto are covered in photographs, but one, in particular, stands out.   Three of his daughters, Bessan, Mayar and Aya, sit on a beach in the Gaza Strip. The tide is out, and the girls - aged 13, 15 and 20...
2016 'deadliest year' for West Bank children in decade
  Israeli forces have killed more Palestinian children in the occupied West Bank and Jerusalem in 2016 than any other year in the last decade, rights group Defense for Children International (DCI) has said.   The organization’s chapter in the occupied Palestinian territories recorded the killings of 32 Palestinian children (under 18),...
UN says 2016 ‘worst year’ for Syrian children
  Child deaths increased 20 percent in civil war-torn Syria in 2016, making it the “worst year” since 2014, according to the United Nation’s children agency Monday.   UNICEF said in a statement that at least 652 children were killed in Syria in 2016 -- 255 of them in or near schools....
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved