---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Gerard Oonk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: 2008/9/30
Subject: Report warns India on devastating asbestos cancer epidemic
To: A-ICNIndiaNewsList2


  FYI

   Please see thgis important message
  Apologies for possible cross-postings

   Gerard Oonk


   International Ban Asbestos Secretariat
  News release: 25 September 2008. Immediate use

   *Report warns India is "on the cusp of a devastating asbestos cancer
epidemic"*

   Record and rising asbestos imports to India will translate to thousands
of asbestos-related cancer deaths each year and are already responsible for
"a hidden epidemic," an expert report has revealed. Exposing the Indian
Government's collusion with asbestos stakeholders at home and abroad, the
authors call for an immediate national ban on all asbestos use.

   "India's Asbestos Time Bomb," published today (September 25, 2008) by a
coalition of Asian campaign and research organizations, global union
federations and the International Ban Asbestos Secretariat (IBAS),
calculates that total asbestos usage in India since 1980 exceeds 6 million
tonnes, matching the amount used in the UK in its entire industrial history.
India is far and away the world's largest importer of asbestos.

   "The UK is now in the grip of its largest ever industrial disease
epidemic, with between 5,000 and 10,000 estimated to be dying of asbestos
cancers every year," says report editor Laurie Kazan-Allen. "India, with
ineffective regulation on asbestos use, is on the verge of a much larger and
more devastating epidemic. Because it can take 30 years or more for
asbestos- related cancers to emerge, India faces an inevitable and sharp
escalation in cancer cases over the next three decades. No one is safe!"

   Annual imports of asbestos to India now exceed a quarter of a million
tonnes, and have climbed rapidly over the last decade. "We estimate asbestos
cancers already claim thousands of lives each year in India, but this will
certainly exceed 10,000 cases a year by 2040," says Kazan-Allen. "This will
put an incredible strain on families, communities and India's medical
system."

   A hidden epidemic exists due to medical ignorance and government
intransigence; in light of the dearth of serious measures to alert workers
and consumers of the asbestos hazard, things can only get worse. India does
not have a national cancer registry or any system to record asbestos cancers
or asbestos exposures, so the problem remains unrecognised and unaddressed.
But instead of acting to remedy these failings, the report warns that India
is actively encouraging asbestos use, both at home and globally.

   India, working closely with asbestos stakeholders in Canada, has been
instrumental in blocking a United Nations move to impose health information
disclosures on exports of chrysotile asbestos. When the UN next considers
applying global right-to- know rules on chrysotile at its Rotterdam
Convention meeting in Rome this October, it is likely that both nations will
again move to veto any effort to require exporters to warn of the risks
posed by using chrysotile asbestos.

   "There is an unimaginable and unconscionable level of ignorance of the
asbestos hazard in India, a situation that is a great boon to Indian
asbestos companies that are benefiting from huge levels of economic growth,"
says IBAS's Laurie Kazan-Allen. "The government is a willing conspirator in
this state of affairs, with devastating consequences for the health of its
citizens. But politicians and asbestos peddlers should take heed – we aim to
see the industry wither and die and its apologists face the courts for
knowingly and in the name of profit pushing the world's worst ever
industrial killer."

   Notes to editors

   1. India's Asbestos Time Bomb is published by the International Ban
Asbestos Secretariat (IBAS), the Building and Woodworkers International,
International Metalworkers' Federation, Asia Monitor Resource Center, Asian
Network for the Rights of Occupational Accident Victims, Corporate
Accountability Desk – The Other Media, Ban Asbestos Network India, Peoples
Training and Research Centre, Baroda, India. The report can be accessed
online at:
  *http://www.ibasecretariat.org/india_asb_time_bomb.pdf*
<http://www.ibasecretariat.org/india_asb_time_bomb.pdf>

   2. Indian asbestos imports increased from under 40,000 tonnes in 1970 to
over 250,000 tonnes in 2006. Since 1960, approximately 7 million tonnes have
been imported.

   3. India is the world's largest importer of chrysotile asbestos, followed
by China, Thailand and the Ukraine – the only countries importing more than
100,000 tonnes. India is Asia's second largest consumer of asbestos.

   4. Indian import duty on asbestos was slashed from 78% in 1995-96 to 15%
in 2004. Lowering the cost of imported asbestos fiber means that dangerous
asbestos-containing products are cheaper than safer alternatives.

   5. India does not operate a national cancer registry or record
occupational histories with medical records, so the asbestos cancer epidemic
is not officially tracked or recorded. There are no official statistics.

   6. The Conference of the Parties of the UN Rotterdam Convention1 will
take place in Rome from October 27-31, 2008. India and Canada have been
instrumental in ensuring previous meetings failed to allow right-to-know
controls on asbestos.

   7. The publication will be launched simultaneously on September 25, 2008
in Asia and Europe at events being held in Mumbai2 and Amsterdam.

   Contacts

   Laurie Kazan-Allen, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

   Rory O'Neill, Hazards, tel: 01535 210462, mobile: 07813 779501.3

   _______

   1 For more information on the Rotterdam Convention see:
http://www.pic.int

   2 For information on the location of the press launch in Mumbai contact
Madhumita Dutta, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

   3 From noon September 24 – September 28, 2008 Rory will handle calls as
Laurie will be in Amsterdam for the European press launch of the monograph.


   Sent by:
  Gerard Oonk
  director India Committee of the Netherlands
  Mariaplaats 4e
  3511 LH Utrecht
  The Netherlands

   030-2321340
  *http://www.indianet.nl*  <http://www.indianet.nl>


   Gerard Oonk
  directeur Landelijke India Werkgroep/
  director India Committee of the Netherlands
  Mariaplaats 4e
  3511 LH Utrecht
  The Netherlands

   030-2321340
  *http://www.indianet.nl*  <http://www.indianet.nl>





-- 
Bobby Kunhu http://community.eldis.org/myshkin/Blog/

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