Locals say they endure river of sorrow

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Unaffordable expenses

The death toll is not just a statistic for 44-year-old Hao Helian: it also represents unbearable pain. Her only child died last year of leukemia.

Hao's 20-year-old son was diagnosed with the disease in January 2011 and died after four months of treatment. He was the youngest person to die of the disease in the village in recent years.

Hou Zhangying, a 73-year-old woman in the village, has been diagnosed with tuberculosis. [China Daily]

Hou Zhangying, a 73-year-old woman in the village, has been diagnosed with tuberculosis. [China Daily]



The medical bills exceeded 300,000 yuan ($47,550), far more than a rural family can afford.

To pay back the money borrowed from relatives, Hao's husband worked at a construction site in the city during slow seasons on the farm, bringing in about 10,000 yuan annually.

Hao ran a grocery store in the village, which did not bring in much money.

"You might have noticed that the things in the store are very cheap," Hao said. "Sometimes I cannot even sell 10 yuan worth of goods in a whole day."

The family can only hope to repay the debts by "watching every penny, every day", Hao said.

She doesn't know if she'll be able to have another child and can't afford to go through medical checks with her husband.

Medical costs are an unaffordable burden for rural families with cancer patients, said Feng.

Her family spent nearly 100,000 yuan for her husband's treatment last year, most of it borrowed from relatives.

As for Feng, she must take five kinds of pills every day and receive injections twice a year. The total medical expenses are about 1,600 yuan per month.

Feng can't earn anything because of her illness, and all of her medical bills have been paid by her 34-year-old son, who works in the local police station for a monthly salary of less than 2,000 yuan. Feng's daughter-in-law is a teacher in the local primary school who earns about 1,000 yuan per month.

The young couple had to send their own daughter to live with the wife's mother, since most of the family's money was used to buy medicine for Feng.

Quality at issue

Although villagers point to the river as the cause of the cancer cases among them, the local government has insisted that the Qihe River isn't polluted.

Yang Jiandong, director of the monitoring station of the Linzhou environmental protection bureau, told China Daily that the bureau had thoroughly checked the water quality on April 10 immediately after the original news report was published.

"Sample tests showed the water quality in the river is better than Level 2, meaning that it's quite safe for drinking," Yang said.

The local government has been serious about protecting the river, and townships around the river are not allowed to develop heavy industry to avoid pollution, the official said.

The official explanation doesn't satisfy the villagers, though, many of whom believe the results of the sample tests were "concocted" by local government officials.

"If the river is not polluted, why do neighboring villages that get water from deep wells have lower rates of cancer?" asked Hou Zhangying, a 73-year-old woman in Dangjie, who has been diagnosed with tuberculosis.

Liang Dawei, an official of the Linzhou publicity department, said that cancer rates in the local villages have been above average since the 1950s.

To deal with the high cancer rate, the local government drilled many wells in the villages in the 1970s, which brought down the cancer rate from 180.89 cases per 100,000 people in 1970 to 82.8 cases in 2003, according to statistics from the Anyang disease prevention and control center.

The local government tried to drill two wells in Dangjie in 1987 and 1989, but hardly any water appeared, even at a depth of nearly 300 meters, according to a statement posted on the government's website on April 12.

The dry wells cost 128,400 yuan, exhausting the government's funds for this purpose and forcing a halt to the effort, said the statement.

Wang Baojiang, head of Dangjie village, told China Daily that the government planned to provide the village with 500,000 yuan to drill a new well, following the report in the China Economic Weekly.

"Geological conditions in the village are quite complex and it is difficult to find an accurate spot to drill well," said the village official. "The construction team has selected four candidate sites for the well."

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