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Title Foreign Correspondent: India
Published Australia : ABC, 2011
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Description 1 online resource (streaming video file) (27 min. 3 sec.) ; 163157174 bytes
Summary There's no doubt asbestos is a dirty, deadly word. In Australia the scandals of Wittenoom and the long-running James Hardie saga have ensured a widespread awareness that asbestos kills often slowly and painfully. In a career uncovering the health hazards of asbestos, reporter Matt Peacock might have thought he'd seen it all. Then he went to India. In a global investigation, we expose a shocking trade and follow the dusty trail from the sub-continent back to another nation readily exporting the stuff it considers too dangerous for locals. Canada.From his tiny, ramshackle home in Ahmedabad 71 year old Naran Mehra cuts a forlorn figure. The former power station worker is sick after years of exposure to asbestos that's used as an insulator in his workplace. 'When it would blow, my hair would turn white'. Naran MehraUnwittingly, he brought the danger home. His wife Sevita Devi used to shake asbestos dust from his clothes before washing them and now she's also stricken with disease. With no money for proper medical care the couple have given up hope for the future.Asbestos illness in India is under-diagnosed and mostly unrecognised as a health problem. But with the proliferation of factories making and using asbestos products and an import trade in asbestos building products booming, India has become a new frontier for what's sure to be a dramatic, devastating health crisis.Indian asbestos workers have little in the way of safety equipment and if they contract a respiratory illness like asbestosis or a cancer like mesothelioma few are paid compensation.And unlike many developed countries where asbestos products have been banned, India can't get enough of what's called poor man's roofing. Alarmingly it's a first world nation that's supplying the stuff. Canada won't use asbestos itself but it is selling it by the shipload to India. Business is so brisk Canada is breathing new life into its asbestos mining industry to bolster its exports.'It amounts to Canada being a purveyor of death around the world. Our country is an exporter of a deadly substance, and we enjoy it ... at least our federal government does'. Professor Amir Attaran, University of OttawaThe asbestos industry is pouring millions of dollars into a campaign to assure India and convince any other developing nation that may be in the market that white asbestos, or chrysotile, is safe.'This particular asbestos has not been known to give cancer, so far' Abhaya Shanker, Managing Director, Hyderabad IndustriesReporter Matt Peacock has spent decades investigating and uncovering many of the health scandals caused by asbestos. In fact much of his reporting has helped to elevate awareness about the dangers of asbestos in Australia. He's encountered some shocking scenes in his career but India's asbestos drama shocked even this seasoned correspondent.'I first began covering the story of its trail of death in Australia thirty years ago. Back home and in other developed countries the problem now is how to get rid of it. But India it seems is racing headlong into repeating the same mistakes only on a massive scale
Event Broadcast 2011-11-08 at 20:00:00
Notes Classification: NC
Subject Asbestos fibers -- Health aspects.
Asbestos fibers -- Physiological effect.
Asbestos industry.
Asbestos -- Environmental aspects.
Hazardous substances.
India.
Form Streaming video
Author Attaran, Amir, contributor
Dutta, Madhumita, contributor
Mehra, Naran, contributor
Peacock, Matt, reporter
Shanker, Abhaya, contributor