Pollution Turns China River Blood Red

In Asia, Global Meltdown Evidence, News Headlines, Pollution, Rivers of Blood - Revelation 16

Industrial discharge and household wastewater have polluted a northern Chinese river so badly that the water is dark red in some sections and has caused chronic illnesses among villagers.

Some of the 50,000 villagers living along polluted stretches of the Futuo River in Hebei province said sweet potatoes and soy beans grown there were tough and would not soften with cooking, the state-run China Environment News reported.

Oil pressed from peanuts harvested in the area smells bad, the report said.
China has some of the world·s most polluted waterways and cities after two decades of breakneck industrial growth. The government has struggled in recent years to balance environmental concerns with economic growth.

One stretch of the Futuo River, once a place for boating and fishing, was flowing reddish-brown, with inches of white foam floating on some parts.

“The river looked like a white boa constrictor slithering into Anping County,” the Oct. 30 report said.

Water drawn from a 400-foot well in the county was red and had a strong odor. Skin, circulatory and gastrointestinal diseases were common and chronic, the report said.

Last year, tests showed the amount of organic pollutants in the water was 37 times more than is allowed according to national standards.

The report blamed wastewater and industrial discharge from paper, dye, leather and soap factories in five counties upstream for the pollution in Anping.

A woman at the Anping county environmental protection bureau confirmed the report but referred questions to the bureau director, who was out of the office and could not be reached for comment Wednesday.

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