A call for action in Minamata
By Joseph DiGangi,
IPEN for Environmental Health News
Minamata Bay's rolling hills and striking beauty contrast with its brutal history of mercury poisoning. |
EDITOR’S NOTE: 25 years ago, I worked on the first
and, so far, only outbreak of Minimata Syndrome in the US, the contamination of
the village of Humacao,
Puerto Rico by mercury from a Squibb thermometer factory upstream. Many of
the village’s children suffered the disfigurement and neurological problems
depicted in this article. We helped the villagers win a buy-out and relocation
of all the residents – W. Collette
MINAMATA, Japan –
Determination takes on a special meaning here. Despite twisted limbs, tremors
and confinement to wheelchairs, people afflicted by the world’s most infamous
mercury poisoning still struggle for justice. As a new international mercury
treaty is launched, they hope that no one ever again will suffer as they have.
Minamata’s rolling hills
and striking beauty contrast with its brutal history. Chisso Corp. discharged
methylmercury into Minamata Bay from 1932 to 1968, poisoning the city’s food
supply. People who ate local fish developed Minamata disease – a debilitating
condition in which they lose sensation in their hands and feet, can no longer
run or walk without stumbling or falling and have difficulty seeing, hearing,
speaking and swallowing. Many of the afflicted died.
Shinobu Sakamoto receives a declaration from IPEN representatives |
Shinobu Sakamoto was born in 1956, shortly after reports of
Minamata disease emerged. The mercury-contaminated fish eaten by her mother
damaged her ability to walk and speak, and later the local elementary school
rejected her. Instead of letting her disability deter her, Sakamoto became a
leader among Minamata victims.
In 1972, Sakamoto and her mother traveled to the
UN Conference on the Human Environment, where she shocked a global audience
with the visible harms of mercury. Forty-one years later, Sakamoto is still
fighting for justice.
Although 2,273
individuals were officially recognized as Minamata disease patients as of 2011,
tens of thousands experience neurological symptoms characteristic of
methylmercury poisoning, but they remain formally unrecognized as Minamata
disease patients.
The discrepancy stems from the diagnostic criteria the
government has used to certify Minamata disease. In 2004, the Supreme Court
declared these criteria to be invalid, and last February, a newspaper reported that
the Environment Ministry repeatedly requested a medical doctor to lie in a
court case to prevent certification of Minamata disease. Approximately 65,000
have applied to the government for compensation.
Vulnerable to both
earthquakes and tsunamis, the "Eco-Site" is now more than halfway
through its expected 40- to 50-year lifespan, with no plan for remediation in
sight.
Last Saturday, IPEN
representatives from 25 countries listened in the rain as Yoshihiro Yamashita,
a Minamata disease victim, stood outside Chisso’s main gate and animatedly
explained how Chisso for years dumped wastewater contaminated with mercury into
Minamata Bay.
Minamata is on the southwestern coast of Japan |
Yamashita knows because he used to work at Chisso. Yamashita
described how eventually the majority of the bay was transformed as it was
filled with the mercury-containing sediment. That sediment has now been turned
into a massive landfill, capped with grass and dubbed an “Eco-Park.”
The sludge
under the park has been “temporarily” placed there for more than 30 years
without any mercury removal. Vulnerable to both earthquakes and tsunamis, the
site is now more than halfway through its expected 40- to 50-year lifespan,
with no plan for remediation in sight. Hidden from view, it remains in
a vulnerable location next to the Bay where it originally poisoned the
community.
On Wednesday, a new
United Nations mercury treaty was ceremonially launched at the “Eco-Park.”
Leaders from around the world stood atop 1.5 million cubic meters of toxic
mercury waste – an image that Minamata victims said they find strange and
ironic.
During negotiations of
the mercury treaty three years ago, Sakamoto personally handed a letter to a
top government official from victims groups opposing the proposal to name the treaty the
“Minamata Convention.” The letter uses polite language to express an underlying
outrage that Minamata victims feel about naming the mercury treaty after their
unresolved tragedy.
However, the concerns of
Sakamoto and other victims extend far beyond their small city as the letter
expresses the hope “for a strong global treaty which will significantly
decrease mercury contamination worldwide so that fish are once again safe to
eat.”
The UN treaty seeks to reduce mercury supply and trade, and phase out or
phase down some products and processes that use it. Some treaty provisions are
legally binding, while others require governments to “endeavor” to take action.
At home, the Minamata
victims hope the treaty will ensure that all are recognized and compensated,
contaminated areas are cleaned up, the polluter takes full financial
responsibility and a comprehensive, independent health study is finally
conducted.
The mercury treaty now
bears Minamata’s name. This creates a special obligation to meet the victims’
demands and transform a human tragedy into an opportunity for change.
DiGangi is senior
science and technical advisor at IPEN, an international organization comprising
700 environmental and community groups in 116 countries that work to minimize
or eliminate toxic substances. IPEN has been involved in the mercury treaty’s
3-year negotiation process.