Lao Villagers Complain Drinking Water Contaminated by Pesticides

2014-05-07
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A map showing the location of Beng district in northern Laos's Oudomxay province.
A map showing the location of Beng district in northern Laos's Oudomxay province.
RFA

Residents of at least six villages in northern Laos are getting sick from drinking water they believe has been contaminated by residue of pesticides and weed-killers, confronting nearby farms for overuse of the chemicals, local sources said.

The ethnic minority villagers in mountainous Oudomxay province’s Beng district have sought the urgent intervention of local authorities after the confrontation raised tensions in the area.

But an agriculture official said there was little the government could do to control use of pesticides and weed-killers, which have polluted the local creeks and streams the villagers rely on for drinking water.

Residents affected by the pollution are from the district’s Napa, Tameun, Khoksa-Ad, Patong, Huai Lor and Phiahuanam areas, a villager said.

Quarrels

After villagers began getting diarrhea on consuming the water, some of them confronted farmers living upstream about their complaint, getting into quarrels with them, the source said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“The farmers use too much pesticide without knowledge [of its effects],” he told RFA’s Lao Service, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“Now villagers are facing hardship and there have been conflicts because of this. We could not discuss it [with them]; they don’t listen and we don’t know what to do.”

The villagers have no access to tap or well water and normally rely on local creeks and streams for drinking water, he said.

“Our drinking water comes every day from creeks,” he said, adding that villagers wanted authorities to help keep their water clean.

Banned substances

A local Department of Agriculture and Forestry said weed killers and pesticides were widely used by farmers in Oudomxay, including ones made of banned substances.

“There are a lot in our villages because … when the (weed killers) are brought in, there are some people who use them in secret and we’re not able to regulate it.”

He said the department had not sent officials to investigate the complaints from the Beng villagers, but were aware that farmers in the area use pesticides and weed killers to grow rice and other crops.

According to government statistics, 64 percent of people in rural communities had improved sources of drinking water in 2012, compared to 88 percent in urban areas.

Laos’s government has pledged to halve the proportion of people without year-round access to safe drinking water by 2015, according to the Vientiane Times.

Reported by RFA’s Lao Service. Written in English by Rachel Vandenbrink.

Comments (4)
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Hum Yai Der

from Patriotism

Laos used to be a very beautiful place on earth with natures, rain forest jungles, rare wild animals, never had pollution and yet no chemical contamination what so ever. The natures had been preserved for generation and century. Many local Lao people never need high tech and modern living condition but they could still survival with no problem--living necessity were abundant. Lao PDR governments and foreigner investors have been destroying the ecosystem nearly completely. They are making a huge mistake and irreversible effect to the natures, country and Lao citizens. For those of you who are still believing in Lao PDR government communist is on the right path, you are very wrong and betrayal to your country.

Jun 01, 2014 09:23 AM

Superman

from Krypton

The Lao government does not give a ... about those villagers and anyone else for that matter. As long as they get a new Lexus or Vigo, they don't care who lives or die.


[This comment has been edited by RFA Editorial staff per our Terms of Use]

May 12, 2014 10:58 AM

Anonymous Reader

laos's dumping ground for extrem poor quality fertilizer and pasticides &other chemical from cina.lao comminusts just takes blind eyes all the times once receiving bribes from those cina investors

May 08, 2014 11:50 PM

Nkajlov

In all developing countries, agricultural chemical / fertilizer users are required to go through a short government training session for a certificate before they can purchase and use the required chemical products for their farm produces. Usually, a farm coop would be set up to sell and order chemicals for farming needs in a country. This way, the risk of missusing them will be minimized and controlled.

Beware of Chinese farming investors! They have poor records of complying with any country's agricultural regulations.

May 08, 2014 02:52 PM

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