Sundarbans (WB):Climate change has turned the waters saline, making agriculture unviable and forcing them to turn to fishing. For women in the marshlands of Sundarbans, this switch is not just about livelihoods but also coping with the debilitating health impact on their lives.
Caught in a vicious trap that means spending hours waist-deep in the very waters that no longer nurture their fields, the women face a battery of menstrual, urinary tract and other infections. With agriculture becoming unviable due to the increase in salinity of the water because of sea level rise, more and more women are becoming dependent on fishing.
This means their exposure to saline water is also increasing, Nihar Ranjan Raptan, director of the NGO Goranbose Gram Bikash Kendra (GGBK) who works in the Sundarbans, told PTI. Irregular menstrual cycles, vaginal infections, recurring UTI and miscarriages are common amongst the women in the Sundarbans, he said.
The ecologically fragile Sundarbans region, which holds a vast mangrove forest, falls in West Bengal's South 24 Parganas region and is said to be one of the worst affected regions in India due to climate change. The area has been battered by frequent cyclones, more than any other place in the country.
According to Revati Mondal, who has been working in the Sundarbans' Goran Bose village for more than two decades, the salinity of the water has been increasing steadily and the health of the women deteriorating. With frequent storms over the years, the salinity of water of most of the rivers and ponds has increased in almost all areas of the Sundarbans, the ASHA worker said.
I visit about 25 homes every day and most of these homes have women who have one or the other problems related to menstruation, Mondal told PTI. "The husbands of most of these women are migrant workers and based somewhere else. The women meet their day-to-day expenses by selling prawns and fish they catch in the river for which they have remain in waist-deep water for four-six hours per day which is the main cause of the health hazard they are facing.
Soma* from Hogalduri village in South 24 Parganas, is living through the misery. The 31-year-old has got urinary tract infection at least four times in the last one year, and said she goes everyday to fish and makes her living selling prawns and small fish she manages to catch.
This means standing in waist-deep water every day for about four to six hours. I am separated from my husband and have to fend for myself and my two children. Earlier I was ashamed to discuss my menstrual problems with ASHA workers or doctors but after the situation became unbearable I had no option left, she said.
Mondal, who has been witness to 20 years of degradation of the environment and of many lives, said hiding menstrual issues due to the stigma associated with it makes the situation worse. In so many cases, these women shy away from telling their problems to doctors. They come to even me only when it turns severe and require much more intensive treatment.