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Rights groups petition European guard dog to protect tidy water in French Caribbean

The International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) said on Thursday it has submitted a collective grievance to a European rights body to require that France urgently makes sure access to drinking water in its Caribbean area of Guadeloupe.

The island territory has long dealt with water scarcities, which right groups associate to poor infrastructure and contamination from a hazardous pesticide that was for decades utilized on banana plantations across the area.

France can not continue to neglect the recurring problems of the Antilles, they have actually lasted too long, FIDH's Western Europe head Elena Crespi stated in a statement. It must recognize that the European Social Charter uses to all its territories.

Discontent rose during the coronavirus pandemic as citizens expressed skepticism in the government's handling of health crises.

Established in 1922, FIDH combines some 188 member groups and is funded by different international bodies and national embassies.

FIDH said it filed the complaint alongside two other rights groups to the European Committee on Social Rights, an arm of the Council of Europe which looks for to promote social and economic rights.

Independently on Thursday, Guadeloupe's SMGEAG water management and sanitation distribute stated numerous communes were struggling with water scarcities, notably throughout the south-eastern parts of the island, pointing out destructive acts and scarcities due to dry spell.

Earlier in March, local authorities stated they were cancelling over 13 million euros ($ 14 million) in water costs for some south-western citizens, and had ditched near to 30 million euros in this area considering that 2020.

FIDH attributed the lacks to extensive leakages, poor sanitation and contamination from the chlordecone pesticide, which was banned in the 1990s due to its toxicity, and can trigger convulsions, nerve deteriorations and greater threats of cancer.

Guadeloupe and the neighboring French territory of Martinique have among the world's highest prostate cancer rates, according to a 2022 research study funded by Public Health France and the nation's National Cancer Institute, and over two times the death rates registered in mainland France.

France in 2021 officially decreed prostate cancer a. professional illness brought on by pesticides such as chlordecone.

(source: Reuters)