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By LINA SAGARAL REYES
Special Correspondent  . 

Last of three parts

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ALUBIJID, Misamis Oriental — While tobacco farmers already use organic fertilizer, they continue to use commercial agrochemicals to contain pests.

Worse, the farmers are unaware of the higher vulnerability of women like them who are exposed to these pesticides to health risks. Most are not sensitive to their impact on the ecology, particularly to pollinators like bees and aquatic life.

“We know malathion and Lannate (a brand of methomyl) is poisonous because we have known several farmers who kill themselves using these,’’ said Maurecia Mana, but she does not ascribe ill-health among farmers as associated to long-term exposure to pesticides. Other farmers say they instill safety measures, like using protective gear while spraying.

Furthermore, according to the women farmers interviewed for this report, none of them are smokers themselves, and they deny that green disease, a common illness among cultivators in other part of the Philippines, inflicts them. 

The farmers continue to use insecticides whose active ingredients, Gold Star Daily has learned, are listed as hazardous by World Health Organization (WHO) and the Pesticide Action Network (PAN) International.

PAN uses the definition of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of hazardous pesticides as “those linked with a high incidence of severe or irreversible adverse effects on human health or the environment.”

These active ingredients include: chlorothalonil, methomyl, cypermethrin, lambda-cyhaloperin, malathion and chlorantraniliprole.

Called euphemistically as crop protection agents, all but the first chemical, are highly toxic to bees and are classified as possible endocrine disruptors. According to WHO, endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) have been suspected to be associated with altered reproductive function in males and females; increased incidence of breast cancer, abnormal growth patterns and neurodevelopmental delays in children, as well as changes in immune function.

Chlorothalonil and malathion are likely and probable carcinogenic, respectively.

Except for chloratraniliprole, the rest of the commonly used insecticides used by farmers here are not endorsed by the National Tobacco Administration (NTA) in its online production manual.

But still the active ingredients in insecticides that NTA  endorses are in the PAN List of Highly Hazardous Pesticides like acephate, pyridalyl and indoxacarb.

According to PAN, chlorantraniliprole  is classified as persistent organic pollutant under the Stockholm Convention, as it is highly toxic to aquatic life and  highly persistent in soil, sediments and water. It should be a concern in villages like Calatcat that use deep wells as source of  water supply, as residues of it can leach into the groundwater and contaminate the wells.

While the town’s comprehensive development plan 2010-2018 acknowledges the impact of pesticides on soil fertility, it fails to factor in their effects on human health and ecology.

According to the Barry Balacuit, municipal environmental and natural resources officer, the reservoir and other water resources in the town are not tested for chemical residues from pesticides, only for E coli or fecal coliform, and lately for arsenic and lead.

Balacuit said that he will discuss this matter with the agricultural services officer, and would then orient farmers on risk reduction measures during village assemblies.

Pedra Villaestique had found a proactive way without using pesticides yet before the economic threshold level is reached, particularly for buros.

Buros is a Bisayan word meaning pregnant, and in the village argot it means an infestation of larvae that causes the stem to swell. Villaestique “performs surgery,’’ by slitting the stem on the bump with a fingernail and removing the worm nested inside.

“It often works. Instead of dying, the plant grows shoots, and later the stalk wears a scar where the incision was.’’

Sometimes, farm technicians suggest safer and more effective methods of using agrochemicals, said the farmers. “But most of the time, we ignore them as we are more experienced,’’ they explained.

But farmer Judith Bacadon thinks it is much better to cull the infected plants to prevent the spread of the disease, while Esterlita Dadang still relies on spraying methomyl for various diseases like budloron as she finds it tedious to monitor 1,800 plants and manually pluck the worms.

Most of the farmers spray every week for 14 weeks, beginning at seedling stage, a week after transplanting and ending a week or two before the last harvest, using one insecticide the whole time. The practice increases, according to farm technicians, the possibility of pests developing resistance to the chemical, and thus consequently the need to increase the amount of chemicals sprayed in the next cropping. In contrast, the NTA manual recommends spraying at most eight times only during the entire season.

Environmental impacts considered, Mayor Giovanni Albin Labis said, “If the smoking trend among the youth keeps on increasing, if there are still smokers around, then we are pretty sure that tobacco plants will still find a market.  As long as tobacco is not classified as illegal drug, it will remain a saleable commodity and be part of the budget for some or majority of the households, ‘’ he speculated.

This, even as the Philippines as a signatory to the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC) has committed to provide measures to reduce the supply of tobacco, particularly finding alternatives for growers and sellers, and to address the environmental destruction and ill-health attributed to tobacco production and smoking.

In its latest implementation data submitted to the WHO FCTC in April 2018, the Philippines had reported that it had already drafted a National Action Plan for viable alternatives after government officials went on a learning trip to Brazil in 2016. Brazil, the world’s largest tobacco exporter and second largest tobacco producer, developed a diversification program to wean farmers from tobacco agriculture that is considered exemplar.

In Alubijid, Gold Star Daily noted that local government unit (LGU) works hand in hand with NTA in providing incentives instead of curbing tobacco production.

According to Labis, the LGU had distributed 12,000 G.I sheets for curing sheds, sacks of organic and inorganic fertilizers, and stainless sprayers to tobacco farmers. All these free goods were bought with the LGU’s pre-2010 incremental share of tobacco excise taxes worth P60-million.

“With the LGU receiving a share of the excise tax, so we follow the common saying: ‘do not kill the goose that lays the golden egg’. Our share of the excise tax is the golden egg and the tobacco farmers the geese.’’ he said. He won’t advise farmers to abandon tobacco.

He said further that “because we cannot provide them a viable alternative source of income they (farmers) can rely on, we can only regulate tobacco use and its production, but we cannot abolish (these),’’ he said.

In the shared household of Ubalda Roxas and Arlene Django, bales of the prized leaves occupy the space behind the wooden sofa in the living room across the tv. As Django opens the frayed cotton blanket that covers the bales, the dried leaves’ lush scent wafts in the air.

In hand a large mano, a hundred udlot leaves strung together by buri twine, each leaf so long and large she could easily sling one over her shoulders like a wrinkly scarf, Django speaks about the labor of caring for tobacco plants. “Imagine how many times our hands touch the leaves. From the time we transplant the seedling, to the time we pluck the suckers to harvesting the leaves, then we string a hundred leaves together, ready them for air-drying then we touch them again when we store them by bales.’’

Then, she goes wisecracking, “I might find that acceptable after all, that probably a time will come when people won’t grow tobacco anymore. But not soon, not while I am still alive. By then, our generation of tobacco planters will all be gone.’’

(Reporting for this story was supported by a grant from InterNews’ Earth Journalism Network and the South East Asia Press Alliance.)

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