The China Mail - The Italian mums who 'poisoned' their children

USD -
AED 3.672501
AFN 68.511278
ALL 83.785921
AMD 381.977863
ANG 1.789783
AOA 916.999591
ARS 1355.953402
AUD 1.540986
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.701894
BAM 1.680703
BBD 2.016534
BDT 122.009487
BGN 1.682895
BHD 0.376998
BIF 2984.583391
BMD 1
BND 1.286866
BOB 6.940052
BRL 5.430963
BSD 1.000705
BTN 87.688196
BWP 13.435824
BYN 3.392513
BYR 19600
BZD 2.012581
CAD 1.38399
CDF 2867.503955
CHF 0.805305
CLF 0.024638
CLP 966.550434
CNY 7.1529
CNH 7.158875
COP 4055.12
CRC 504.26234
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 94.755431
CZK 21.09915
DJF 178.201911
DKK 6.42486
DOP 62.766396
DZD 129.844459
EGP 48.592049
ERN 15
ETB 142.075742
EUR 0.860603
FJD 2.265603
FKP 0.741734
GBP 0.743225
GEL 2.695023
GGP 0.741734
GHS 11.157707
GIP 0.741734
GMD 71.506157
GNF 8675.924653
GTQ 7.670494
GYD 209.275746
HKD 7.776585
HNL 26.208236
HRK 6.485201
HTG 130.938059
HUF 340.975503
IDR 16349.55
ILS 3.346745
IMP 0.741734
INR 87.69425
IQD 1311.013337
IRR 42049.999807
ISK 123.249719
JEP 0.741734
JMD 160.22446
JOD 0.708995
JPY 147.771011
KES 129.25037
KGS 87.425296
KHR 4011.412072
KMF 423.249818
KPW 900.015419
KRW 1395.639812
KWD 0.305697
KYD 0.833906
KZT 535.155713
LAK 21696.686374
LBP 90073.387873
LKR 302.359755
LRD 200.639351
LSL 17.652018
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.412141
MAD 9.036677
MDL 16.702186
MGA 4417.881204
MKD 52.883954
MMK 2099.054675
MNT 3597.17449
MOP 8.04087
MRU 39.978345
MUR 46.389446
MVR 15.410186
MWK 1735.270865
MXN 18.685599
MYR 4.228971
MZN 63.950211
NAD 17.652018
NGN 1534.4898
NIO 36.822838
NOK 10.143325
NPR 140.301457
NZD 1.71056
OMR 0.38449
PAB 1.000705
PEN 3.52004
PGK 4.169513
PHP 57.18299
PKR 283.799842
PLN 3.666241
PYG 7242.540905
QAR 3.648941
RON 4.3531
RSD 100.857016
RUB 80.499318
RWF 1449.023787
SAR 3.752147
SBD 8.217066
SCR 14.787405
SDG 600.523342
SEK 9.57963
SGD 1.287465
SHP 0.785843
SLE 23.250402
SLL 20969.49797
SOS 571.892617
SRD 38.324498
STD 20697.981008
STN 21.054079
SVC 8.755844
SYP 13002.232772
SZL 17.656916
THB 32.497505
TJS 9.581758
TMT 3.5
TND 2.931648
TOP 2.342101
TRY 41.039925
TTD 6.79912
TWD 30.595495
TZS 2512.948031
UAH 41.422298
UGX 3565.413172
UYU 40.019593
UZS 12314.381961
VES 141.606965
VND 26365
VUV 119.58468
WST 2.776302
XAF 563.691908
XAG 0.02598
XAU 0.000296
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.803503
XDR 0.701052
XOF 563.691908
XPF 102.485219
YER 240.175017
ZAR 17.657065
ZMK 9001.198186
ZMW 23.345765
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    1.4500

    77

    +1.88%

  • RYCEF

    0.1500

    14.33

    +1.05%

  • RIO

    -0.3800

    61.95

    -0.61%

  • BTI

    -0.4700

    57.33

    -0.82%

  • SCS

    0.2300

    16.62

    +1.38%

  • CMSD

    -0.1500

    23.87

    -0.63%

  • RELX

    0.0700

    47.86

    +0.15%

  • BCC

    -1.1300

    88.85

    -1.27%

  • CMSC

    0.0620

    23.862

    +0.26%

  • NGG

    0.5500

    71.04

    +0.77%

  • GSK

    0.1900

    39.83

    +0.48%

  • JRI

    -0.0700

    13.36

    -0.52%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    11.86

    -0.08%

  • BCE

    -0.3200

    24.9

    -1.29%

  • BP

    -0.3000

    34.67

    -0.87%

  • AZN

    0.3900

    80.05

    +0.49%

The Italian mums who 'poisoned' their children
The Italian mums who 'poisoned' their children / Photo: © AFP

The Italian mums who 'poisoned' their children

Elisabetta Donadello "poisoned" her children. After unwittingly living off polluted land in northeast Italy for decades, she had toxic chemicals in her blood -- which she passed on with each pregnancy.

Text size:

Donadello, 50, is one of thousands of mothers in the region who discovered they had ingested "forever chemicals" known as PFAS and transmitted them to their babies, both in the womb and through breastfeeding.

Some are now civil plaintiffs in a criminal case against chemicals company Miteni, which is accused of causing one of Europe's biggest environmental disasters for discharging the hormone-altering substances into water sources, affecting 350,000 people.

"For 40 years I ate the vegetables grown here, and passed them on to my children in pregnancy... so basically I poisoned my children," said Donadello, who lives in the house in which she grew up.

Both children, now eight and 10, have high levels in their blood, but especially Donadello's first born, "because it's awful... the mother dumps them (the chemicals) on her first child", she told AFP.

Chronic exposure to even low levels of PFAS has been linked to liver damage, high cholesterol, reduced immune responses, low birthweights and several kinds of cancer.

Donadello says both children appear well, but she finds herself watching them closely for sickness.

"I'm afraid. I don't have normal reactions when they have even trivial symptoms... because there is always the fear that it could mean something is happening because of the pollutants," she said.

- No taste, colour, smell -

Fifteen managers of the Miteni factory are on trial in Vicenza, accused of knowingly leaking PFAS into a waterway that fed into others, polluting a vast area between Vicenza, Verona and Padova.

Donadello is part of a group of mothers dubbed the "Mamme No PFAS" (Mums Against PFAS), who united after discovering their families had the chemicals in their blood.

She lives around 12 kilometres (7.5 miles) from the factory, which is now closed down. But her garden sits above a polluted aquifer that feeds the well and was used to water the allotment.

She stopped using the well in 2015 and has turned it and part of her allotment over to scientists from Padua University, so they can study the extent to which the water with PFAS contaminates fruit and vegetables.

"The first year salad and tomatoes were planted. Soil and water analysis before, during and after, showed the vegetables... if irrigated with contaminated water, are themselves contaminated," she said.

The vegetables now watered with rainwater are safe, but the family has stopped eating their home-grown kiwis or making grape jam from their vines, for the plants have deep roots that draw on the aquifer.

Donadello said PFAS were found even in the eggs from the family's free-range chickens.

She and other campaigners accuse Veneto regional authorities of failing to properly inform people about the contamination, so that many families continue blithely to eat home-grown or locally grown produce.

The region is also a plaintiff in the case.

"PFAS have no taste, colour or smell, (so) the vegetables taste fantastic," she said.

"How do you convince someone who has been eating the things he has been self-producing for his whole life... to stop eating them? With indisputable data, stated clearly and with authority."

- Paradise lost -

Donadello's 84-year-old father has a tractor, a shed piled high with tools and a passion for the allotment. She remembers helping him as a child, pulling up radishes and leeks with her sister.

He was reluctant to stop using the land, and only did so when faced with his grandchildren's blood test results.

"It's terrible for a person who is in touch with his land to think that he can no longer use it," Donadello said as she watched him and her young son uproot a contaminated cherry tree.

The Miteni factory shut in 2018 but the land is still full of PFAS, which are washed into the torrent running beside it when it rains.

Donadello is close to tears when she looks across the green fields to snow-capped mountains beyond and thinks of the ruin of what was once "my paradise".

"It is painful to think that poisoned water is flowing under my feet, and it will probably be like that forever, if there is no cleanup," she said.

"This was my grandparents' land, my father's land. What am I leaving to my children?"

L.Kwan--ThChM