MORE facts have emerged from the current lead ore poisoning in five communities in Zamfara State, where several people and animals have died.
Leaders of the affected communities of Yargalmal in Bukkuyum Local Council, Dareta, Tungar Daji, Sunke, and Abare villages in Anka Local Council, told The Guardian at the weekend that the victims were mostly children and women.
According to them, over 300 people people have died from the lead poisoning in the last three months.
Also, hundreds of cattle, sheep, birds and other animals were killed as a result of the contamination of both the water and environment.
The Village Head of Dareta, Alhaji Muhammad Bello, who took The Guardian to the cemeteries where the victims were buried, said over 100 people in his village died from the poisoning.
Bello linked the scourge to illegal mining of gold, which are taken to Gusau, the state capital, where there is a ready market patronised by highly placed Nigerians.
The ruler said ”despite our predicament, the merchants still engage in the brisk business. Three trucks loaded with ‘gold rocks’ were transported by vehicles from here to Gusau yesterday.”
To visit the spots of the lead contamination, residents said: “You must put on a mask or some protective device unless you do not want to return alive.”
According to them, the environment, the streams and the rivers from which the residents obtain their drinking water, have been polluted, adding that this accounted for the death of hundreds of children, women, and animals from the disaster.
The residents appealed to both the Federal and state governments for assistance in the provision of potable drinking water, food, medicine, clean up of the environment, and health education.
An official of the Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (CDC) now in Yargalma, who sought anonymity, told The Guardian that over 160 fresh cases were confirmed between Saturday and yesterday with lead poisoning cases.
The Secretary of Zamfara State Red Cross Society, Mr. Ibrahim Bello Gusau, said reports from Yalgalma through Medicines Sans Frontieres (MSF) and CDC indicated that fresh cases running into hundreds had been recorded by the two organisations.
According to him, lack of adequate capacity had hampered the efforts of MSF and CDC to establish a temporary hospital in Yargalma as they did in Bukkuyum and Dareta.
But officials of the state government said only 163 people died in the five villages in two local councils following the gushing out of lead ore at different “mining” points in the area.
Briefing reporters yesterday evening at the state secretariat of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), the Commissioner for Health, Dr. Sa’ad Idris Dan’isa, said about 400 people were affected by the poisoning in the five communities.
He said although the tragedy occurred in phases, the increasing activities of illegal miners and other residents trooping to the scenes had led to the high death toll.
The commissioner said his ministry had last March received a report from the Bukkuyum Local Council that “some children in Yargalma village had died after showing symptoms such as abdominal pain, vomiting and convulsion, among others.
“After a few days, similar cases were reported in Dareta, Abare and Tunga Daji in Anka Local Council, which shares border with Bukkuyum Local Council. Following these reports, we commenced full investigation into the cause of the illness and death in these two local councils, which occurred mostly in children under five years,” Dan’isa said.
The deceased have been buried in line with Islamic rites from March this year till date.
He said with the assistance of MSF, “we sent blood specimen to a reference laboratory in Germany, which confirmed that the affected children had lead poisoning. As at June 5, 2010, a total of 355 suspected and probable cases and 163 deaths have been established.”
He said the illegal mining in the areas had for over a year fascinated both women and children, adding that development had led to the contamination of soil, water and food with adverse health effects on children and adults.
“These adverse effects of lead poisoning are however more pronounced in children, where it can cause impaired hearing and behavioural problems and death. In pregnant women, lead poisoning can cause immediate miscarriage while in adult men, it can lead to reduction in the quality and quantity of sperms.”
Dani’sa said the state government had released N240 million for the treatment of the affected people, adding that all medical personnel of the General Hospitals in Bukkuyum and Anka were deployed in the areas for four weeks.
He said the action was aimed at stopping further deaths in the affected councils.
Governor Mahmud Aliyu Shinkafi, he said, had set up an emergency response committee comprising of all stakeholders.
”With the assistance of Federal Ministry of Health and some partners such as CDC, World Health Organisation (WHO) and MSF, we have commenced activities to identifying the full extent of lead poisoning and mitigate its effects in these two local councils. These include household survey, collection of laboratory specimen and environmental assessment,” Dani’sa stated.
“Preliminary blood tests showed that 61 per cent of under five children tested in Yargalma had high blood lead level. We have also commenced treatment for children with high blood lead levels in Bukkuyum area,” he added.
To curb the poison from spreading and death toll, the commissioner advised residents not to “break, wash, dry or store ore rock/ground ore materials in your compound or near your home. Do not use the ground ore materials left from mining activities for making bricks or walls for your homes. These materials are contaminated with lead and are dangerous to children, women and men.
“Children should not be allowed to play in former ore processing sites. Miners should keep separate clothes and shoes at the mining site to prevent bringing contaminated dust to their homes. They should wear masks or clothes to cover their mouths when breaking and grinding ore.”
Lead poisoning, also known as Plumbism, colica pictonium, saturnism, Devon Colic or painter’s colic, is a medical condition caused by increased levels of the heavy metal lead in the body. Lead interferes with a variety of body processes and is toxic to many organs and tissues, including the heart, bones, intestines, kidneys and the reproductive and nervous systems, according to Wikipedia.
Systems include abdominal pain, headache, anaemia, irritability and in severe cases, seizures, coma and death.
The main tool of diagnosis is measurement of the blood lead level.
The major treatments are removal of the source of lead and chelating therapy, that is, administration of agents that bind lead so that it can be excreted.
Lead is one of the earliest metals discovered by human beings and was believed to have been mined first in Asia Minor around 6,500 BC and is used in many household products, including creams.
Jun72010