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In addition, children working on banana plantations were exposed to toxic pesticides when they continued laboring in the fields or in packing plants while fungicide-spraying airplanes passed overhead. According to the information provided to Human Rights Watch by representatives of Chiquita, Dole, and Noboa, a variety of different fungicides are sprayed aerially on banana plantations in Ecuador. Based on this information, Human Rights Watch has learned that among the most common are tridemorph, propiconazole, benomyl, mancozeb, azoxystrobin, and bitertanol. The first two are classified as \"moderately hazardous,\" category II by the WHO, while the others are labeled by the WHO as \"unlikely to present acute hazard in normal use.\"98 Regardless of their classifications, however, the U.S. EPA has established restricted-entry intervals (REIs)-the time after pesticide application when entry into the treated area is banned or limited-for all aerially applied pesticides, setting a minimum REI of four hours, during which time workers should not be permitted, under any circumstances, to enter treated areas.99 Though deemed \"unlikely to present acute hazard in normal use,\" at least three of the latter four fungicides listed above have been found to cause mild adverse health effects. For example, the U.S. EPA has established a twenty-four-hour REI for mancozeb, identified as \"moderately irritating to the skin and respiratory mucous membranes,\" causing itching, scratchy throat, sneezing, coughing, and nose or throat inflammation.100 The U.S. EPA has also established a twenty-four-hour REI for benomyl and a twelve-hour REI for azoxystrobin,101 both of which have been found to cause skin reactions and irritation.102 Benomyl has also been classified by the U.S. EPA as a possible human carcinogen.103 Furthermore, in the United States, over one hundred lawsuits from across the world have been filed against the U.S. company producing the benomyl product used on Ecuador's banana plantations, alleging, among other claims, that the chemical is responsible for serious birth defects in children whose parents were exposed to the product, including cleft palate and being born with no eyes.104 On April 19, 2001, the company announced that it would cease sales of the product on December 31, 2001, though it stated that it \"remains fully confident\" that the product \"is safe when used as directed.\"105 Bitertanol is not registered for use in the United States; the U.S. EPA, therefore, has not established an REI for the product, nor have conclusive determinations been made regarding the product's toxicity for humans.106 The two \"moderately hazardous\" fungicides frequently applied to banana crops through aerial fumigation-tridemorph and propiconazole-can cause a variety of unpleasant symptoms. Both have been classified by Germany's Federal Environment Agency as \"potential endocrine disrupter[s],\"107 \"capable of interfering with the proper functioning of estrogen, androgen and thyroid hormones,\" which can result in sterility or decreased fertility and metabolic disorders.108 They have also been found to cause both skin and eye irritation,109 and propiconazole has been classified by the U.S. EPA as \"a possible human carcinogen.\"110 The REI established by the U.S. EPA for propiconazole, according to its product label, is twenty-four hours, while tridemorph has not been registered with the U.S. EPA for use in the United States.111 Although these six fungicides are among those most commonly applied aerially to banana plantations in Ecuador, Human Rights Watch cannot verify which, if any, were applied on the plantations on which the forty-five children interviewed by Human Rights Watch labored. However, Human Rights Watch discussed with forty of these children the procedures adopted by their plantations with respect to aerial fumigation. Of the forty, thirty-eight stated that they continued working on the plantations while the airplanes sprayed the banana fields. Diego Rosales, a fourteen-year-old who had worked on plantation Guabital since he was thirteen, explained, \"When the plane passes, you keep working. When the water falls on you, you can feel it on your skin. You keep working.\"112Fifteen of the children who continued working while pesticide-spraying airplanes flew overhead described to Human Rights Watch various adverse health effects that they had suffered after aerial fumigation, including headaches, fever, dizziness, red eyes, stomachaches, nausea, vomiting, trembling and shaking, itching, burning nostrils, fatigue, and aching bones. Although these symptoms of pesticide poisoning could also be attributed to other illnesses, the link between these ailments and the six commonly applied fungicides described in this section-each approved by at least two of the five banana-exporting corporations discussed in this report-merits further investigation. Fabiola Cardozo said that twice when she was twelve and working in a packing plant on San Alejandro of the plantation group Las Fincas, she became ill after aerial fumigation. She described that the first time, \"I got a fever. . . . I told my boss that I felt sick, and he didn't believe me [but] told me to go home. I went home, and my mother took me to the doctor. . . . [The second time,] I became covered with red things. They itched. I had a cough. My bones hurt. I told my boss. He sent me home. I didn't go to the doctor.\"113 Similarly, Carolina Chamorro told Human Rights Watch that after aerial fumigation, \"I felt sick twice. I was ten years old. . . . I began to shake.\" She said that she thought she was going to faint and told her boss, who sent her home, and that her mother took her to the doctor.114 Susana Gómez, a sixteen-year-old who had worked in a packing plant on Santa Carla in the canton of Balao since she was fourteen, explained that after aerial spraying, \"My nose burns. The liquid gets in my nose because of the wind, and my hands begin to itch.\"115 Cristóbal Alvarez, a twelve-year-old boy, also explained, \"That poison-sometimes it makes one sick. Of course, I keep working. I don't cover myself. Once I got sick. I vomited [and] had a headache . . . after the fumigation. I was eleven years old. . . . I told my bosses. They gave me two days to recover. I went home. The bosses didn't take me to the doctor. My mom took me.\"116 The children told Human Rights Watch about the various methods that they used to protect themselves from the toxic liquid: hiding under banana leaves, bowing their heads, covering their faces with their shirts, covering their noses and mouths with their hands, and placing banana cartons on their heads. As one boy, Enrique Gallana, a fourteen-year-old working on plantation San Carlos in Balao, explained, \"When the planes pass, we cover ourselves with our shirts. . . . We just continue working. . . . We can smell the pesticides.\"117 Three child packing plant workers and two child field workers also stated that their bosses provided them with masks when the aerial fumigation began but expected them to continue working.118 Eduardo Martínez, a fourteen-year-old who had worked on Balao Chico since he was thirteen, stated, however, that he did not wear the mask provided by his boss and that nobody wore their masks.119 Many of the packing plant workers explained that they were shielded by the packing plant roofs from the toxic liquid sprayed from the airplanes. Nevertheless, the packing plants are open-air structures with concrete or dirt floors, roofs on posts, and no walls. Several children correctly observed that, although they were covered by a roof, the fungicide could, nonetheless, be carried through the air into the packing plant's interior. As Armando Heredia, an eleven-year-old working on plantation San Miguel in the canton of Naranjal, explained, \"The airplane only passes over the fields, [but] it [the liquid] comes to us with the wind. We cover ourselves with our shirts when the liquid comes.\"120 The U.S. EPA has recognized this concept as \"spray drift,\" noting, \"When pesticide solutions are sprayed by . . . aircraft, droplets are produced. . . . Many of these droplets can be so small that they stay suspended in air and are carried by air currents.\"121 153554b96e
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