By Tricitynews Reporter
Chandigarh
21st October:- A public
outreach and awareness programme was organized under the aegis of Department of
Telecommunications (DoT) on sharing scientific studies and the current government
and regulatory ecosystem in India on Electromagnetic Field (EMF) Emissions and
Mobile Towers. The
program highlighted that the mobile towers in India are safe and the emissions
are within and often much below the prescribed norms of the DoT. It was further
highlighted that government of India has very strict norms on monitoring and
compliance, comparable with international best practices and there are no
scientific studies linking mobile EMF emissions with human health hazards.
J.S. Deepak,
Secretary, DoT, Ministry of Communications, Govt. of India & Chairman,
Telecom Commission, delivered
the inaugural address. Sarvesh
Kaushal, Chief Secretary, Punjab and Depinder Singh Dhesi, Chief Secretary,
Haryana graced the occasion as the Chief Guests in the inaugural session of this
programme. Several senior officers from the Central Government, States of
Punjab, Haryana and Himachal Pradesh, eminent persons and public
representatives were also present. An expert panel comprising of telecom
officers from the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) and doctors presented
the scientific facts clarifying various myths on possible health hazards from
mobile tower radiation.
Delivering
the inaugural address, J.S. Deepak, Secretary, DoT, brought out the important role played by mobile
telephony and various benefits derived from it, at an individual, social and
national level. He emphasised that whether India grows at normal pace or it actually leapfrogs to
become one of the most developed nation in coming decades, will inter-alia depend
on how we embrace and harness wireless communication technologies. Telecom towers are critical installations on which the
backbone of wireless communication rests and unfounded apprehensions around EMF
emissions and mobile towers have the potential to derail our growth story. The
DoT Secretary said, that there is no scientific evidence backing the claim that
EMF radiation from mobile towers, which are below the safe limits prescribed by
the International Commission on Non-ionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP) and
recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO) can cause adverse health
effects. The DoT has already prescribed strict precautionary norms for exposure
limit for the Radio Frequency Field (Base Station Emissions) which is ten times more stringent than the
existing limits prescribed by ICNIRP and recommended by WHO. He added that in
fact our EMF norms are much stricter than what is followed by many developed nations, including
the US, the UK and most parts of the European Union. Further, the Government of India has taken
adequate steps to ensure that Telecommunications Service Providers strictly adhere
to these prescribed norms.
Dr. R.M. Chaturvedi, DDG-CS, DoT,
pointed out that WHO has referred to approximately 25,000 studies, conducted around the world over the past 30
years, and based on an in-depth review of scientific literature,
has concluded that despite the feeling of some people that more research needs
to be done, scientific knowledge
in this area is now more extensive than for most chemicals. Current evidence
does not confirm the existence of any health consequences from exposure to low
level electromagnetic fields.
He also referred to the EMF Project established by WHO, in
which over 50 national authorities and 8 international organizations are
involved. Together, since 1996, they have been reviewing scientific information to
provide scientifically sound and objective answers to public concerns
about the possible hazards of low-level electromagnetic fields. Despite extensive research, to date there is
no evidence to conclude that exposure to low-level electromagnetic fields is
harmful to human health.
A Committee, formed at the behest of
Hon’ble Allahabad High Court comprising experts from five IITs, AIIMS (Delhi), Indian
Council of Medical Research (ICMR) and Indian Institute of Toxicology Research,
Lucknow, has also on the basis of scientific evidence, studies and
reports available, found that there
is no conclusive evidence about the stated dangers of EMF radiation from mobile
BTS tower.
Shivendra Bhatnagar, Senior DDG, Telecom Enforcement Resource & Monitoring (TERM)
unit, said that strict monitoring and enforcement mechanism has been put in
place by the DoT for EMF-related compliances. In case any BTS site is found to violate prescribed EMF
norms, actions are taken to put a penalty of Rs. 10 lakh per BTS per incidence, including
closing of BTS site in case violation persists.
Several High
Courts, including the Hon’ble High Courts of Punjab & Haryana, Madras, Kerala, Gujarat and Allahabad in cases related to issue of
effects of the radiation from cellphone towers have given judgements whereby
they have dismissed petitions, where the mobile tower installations were
challenged in various localities, including residential, on grounds of health
effects of EMF radiation.
Dr.
Suresh Attili from Grace Cancer Foundation and Dr. TK Joshi, Advisor to
Ministry of Health, endorsed the fact that scientific studies have not
been able to conclude that EMF emissions from mobile towers can cause health
hazards. Mobile towers in India have been found to be completely safe and
emissions are well within the prescribed Government of India norms. The program
concluded with an interactive Q&A session between senior government
officials and participants from civil society, RWA’s and the media.
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