The Times of India 04.03.2013
Here’s the buzz: It’s time to move or face the bite
CHENNAI: After trying
various ways to counter the mosquito problem and meeting with complete
failure, Chennai Corporation recently decided to distribute mosquito
nets to residents of localities along the city’s 16 minor and major
waterways.
Too little, too late.
The corporation has
spent more than 10 crore on fogging operations over the past five years,
but swarms of mosquitoes are driving people in the city to desperation.
There has been a surge in the number of mosquitoes across the
city over the past week, especially in places along the Cooum and the
Adyar and Buckingham, Captain Cotton, Otteri, Virugambakkam and Mambalam
canals. People are fleeing their houses to move to localities where
there are likely to be fewer mosquitoes.
Ganesh Kumar, who has a
baby boy at home, started a frantic search after he found his house in
Mylapore infested with mosquitoes. The 32-year-old accountant was
worried the baby would fall ill with one of the many diseases that the
insects carry: Malaria, dengue, chikungunya, even Japanese encephalitis. He would take no chances, he decided, even if it meant a whole lot of trouble and extra expense.
He now pays 2,000 more per month for the house he’s taken in Saligramam but it has bought him relief and peace of mind.
“It became impossible to stay in the house in Mylapore because of the
mosquitoes,” Kumar said. “I brought the problem to the notice of various
corporation officials but they did nothing to clean up the area and
keep the mosquitoes in check.”
Lakshmi Sethuraman, who recently shifted to Choolaimedu from Adyar, says repellants and coils do not stop mosquitoes any longer.
Brokers in the city say people now factor in the mosquito menace
potential before they decide to purchase a house or take one on rent.
“Every locality has mosquitoes but in some areas it is a severe problem.
People now avoid houses near the Adyar and Cooum,” said R Saravanan, a
real estate agent in Teynampet.
Experts say culex mosquitoes
are mainly to blame for the surge in numbers. The species that can cause
a wide variety of diseases – from filariasis to Japanese encephalitis.
The anopheles and Aedes egypti variety breed in fresh water, but culex
mosquitoes lay their eggs in sewage.
Records show that mosquito
density is extremely high in Royapuram, Teynampet, Manali, Mylapore,
Vyasarpadi, Sowcarpet, Adyar and Tondiarpet. The situation is not quite
as bad in Anna Nagar, Thiru-Vi-Ka Nagar, Triplicane and Ashok Nagar. Corporation officials say six of every 10 calls they receive on the 1913 helpline has to do with mosquitoes.
Senior corporation officials, adept at passing the buck, blame the
public works department. “The mosquito numbers are rising because of
poor desilting of water bodies by the PWD,” an official said.