Dioxin disaster

by frog

TV3′s Melanie Reid has spent the last year investigating dioxin contamination from the herbicide 2-4-5-T, especially in the New Plymouth suburb of Paritutu, where Ivon Watkins Dow manufactured the chemical for more than 20 years. The result, a 90-min documentary called Let us Spray went to air last night. If you missed it, you can watch it online here.

The documentary is extremely disturbing. Most notably, a forensic accountant hired by TV3 went through an earlier Ministry of Health report into dioxin contamination in New Plymouth and found that ill-defined parameters, muddled reporting of facts and inconsistencies in drawing conclusions masked the true extent of the dioxin contamination problem.

Also disturbing are the birth defects documented by a local midwife, and the fact that Ivon Watkins Dow continued to manufacture 2-4-5-T in New Zealand until 1987, making us the last country in the world to manufacture the dangerous substance.

Sue K is calling on the Government to undertake a six-point programme of response:

1. Issue a formal apology to the Paritutu community for the role of successive governments in promoting and subsididing the use of 245T, and in concealing its effects.

2. Launch legal action against the parent Dow Chemical company in the interests of obtaining compensation for residents, and to demonstrate that New Zealand is not a place where multinationals can readily escape the consequences of their actions.

3. Create a national register of those current and former Paritutu residents affected with symptoms of dioxin poisoning.

4. Provide free healthcare and a blood serum test for those people (and their children) on the register.

5. Appoint an inter-generational study of the health effects of the Dow Chemical plant’s proximity to the residents and former residents of Paritutu, to be carried out independently of the Ministry of Health.

6. Provide accident compensation to all employees who worked in the Dow factory and who suffer health effects as a consequence.

She requested an urgent debate on the issue today, but the Speaker declined the request. The official response so far has been underwhelming, to say the least.

frog says

Published in Health & Wellbeing | Media | Parliament by frog on Tue, October 24th, 2006   

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