The groundwater in all the 20 districts of the state, where the Government recently carried out a survey in association with the UNICEF, have been found contaminated by arsenic. The preliminary reports from the 31 other districts, where survey is going on, are yet to come.
The state Rural Development Minister, Daddu Prasad, shared this alarming information in the Assembly on Wednesday.
Replying to a notice of Hindu Mahasabha member Radha Mohan Agarwal, Prasad said that the study was conducted in 322 development blocks of the 20 districts in the state where the amount of arsenic present in the groundwater was found beyond the permissible limit of 0.05 MG per litre.
In the Balia and Lakhimpur districts, which are the worst affected by the arsenic contamination, hundreds of hand pumps have been sealed.
The 11 other districts that have high arsenic content in its ground water are Bahriach, Chandauli, Gazipur, Gorakhpur, Basti, Siddarthnagar, Balrampur, Sant Kabir Nagar, Unnao, Bareilly and Moradabad. The seven partially affected districts are Raebareli, Mirzapur, Bijnor, Meerut, Sant Ravi Das Nagar, Shahjahanpur and Gonda.
The survey has also pointed to the high level of arsenic contamination in 6,277 habitats of the 20 districts.
The minister assured the House of taking all possible measures to overcome this danger. He said that a task force, comprising officials from Uttar Pradesh Jal Nigam, Central Ground Water Board, UNICEF, Industrial Toxicology Research Institute of Lucknow, IIT Kanpur and CSM Medical University of Lucknow, has been constituted and it has submitted its report.
Rejecting the demand of the Opposition to table the report of the task force in the House, he said the measures have been taken on the basis of the recommendations of the task force.
He said people are being made aware of the dangers of using arsenic contaminated water for bathing and washing purpose. He said in several affected districts hand pumps have been painted with a red colour ‘X’ mark to prevent people from using water from those pumps.
In some affected districts, hand pumps have been bored at greater depth.