http://news.kuwaittimes.net/2013/02/22/pollution-linked-cancer-villages-exist-china/

Pollution-linked ‘cancer villages’ exist: China 
BEIJING: China’s environment ministry has acknowledged the existence of “cancer 
villages”, after years of assertions by academics and domestic media that 
polluted areas experience higher rates of the disease. The use of the term in 
an official report, thought to be unprecedented, comes as authorities face 
growing discontent over industrial waste, hazardous smog and other 
environmental and health consequences of years of rapid growth. “Poisonous and 
harmful chemical materials have brought about many water and atmosphere 
emergencies… certain places are even seeing ‘cancer villages’,” said a 
five-year plan that was highlighted this week.

The report did not elaborate on the phenomenon, which has no technical 
definition but gained prominence in domestic and foreign media after a Chinese 
journalist posted a map in 2009 pinpointing dozens of such “cancer villages”.
The ministry acknowledged that in general China uses “poisonous and harmful 
chemical products” that are banned in developed countries and “pose long-term 
or potential harm to human health and the ecology”. Environmental lawyer Wang 
Canfa, who runs an aid centre in Beijing for victims of pollution, said Friday 
it was the first time the “cancer village” phrase had appeared in a ministry 
document.

“It shows that the environment ministry has acknowledged that pollution has led 
to people getting cancer,” he said. “It shows that this issue, of environmental 
pollution leading to health damages, has drawn attention.” A ministry official 
who declined to be named could not confirm whether it was the first time it had 
used the phrase, but said it had previously acknowledged the connection between 
the environment and human health. Media reports about “cancer villages” emerged 
as early as 1998. Official sources such as government websites and television 
stations have altogether reported 241 such locations, a US-based geography 
professor said in a 2010 study.

The total reached 459 if accounts from “unofficial” sites such as online 
portals were included, University of Central Missouri academic Lee Liu said in 
the US-based journal Environment. The villages tended to be near major rivers, 
where people have congregated for generations but which also tended to attract 
industrial parks seeking easy access to water. “Water contamination from 
industrial pollution is believed to be the main cause of cancer villages,” Liu 
wrote. Cancer incidence has shot up 80 percent over the past three decades-a 
period of breakneck economic growth-to become the country’s most common cause 
of death, the China Daily cited the health minister as saying in 2010.

Today 2.7 million Chinese people die from cancer a year, the paper reported 
last month, citing the 2012 annual report from the Cancer Registry. Frustration 
over industrial pollution has sparked several huge protests over the past year 
and forced officials to promise to shut plants. Several days of thick smog that 
covered swathes of the country last month prompted a public outcry as well as 
rare criticism from state-run media and top government officials. The air 
pollution prompted a rise in hospital visits and forced flights to be cancelled 
as visibility dropped to as low as 100 metres. – AFP


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