Summary
9 March 2012
Doctors in the Indian city of Mumbai say 163 people have been admitted to hospital following celebrations for the Hindu festival of colours, Holi. The doctors suspect the coloured powders used by the patients in the festival contained harmful chemicals.
Reporter
Rajini Vaidyanathan
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Report
Doctors at Mumbai's Sion hospital say dozens of patients arrived at the casualty ward complaining of giddiness, vomiting and headaches. The vast majority were children from one of Mumbai's largest slums, Dharavi. Most are in a stable condition. It's believed they developed a reaction to coloured powders they were throwing.
Across the country, millions of people from all walks of life smear and cover themselves from head to toe in bright paints and powders as is custom for Holi. But there has been concern for some time that some of the artificially-produced dyes, which are cheap to buy, contain harmful toxic chemicals which can lead to serious skin and breathing problems.
There has been a push in recent years to encourage more revellers to use organic and environmentally-friendly dyes to avoid health risks.
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Vocabulary
- giddiness
dizziness, feeling like you might fall over
- slums
poor, crowded parts of a city, often with bad living conditions
- stable
steady, not worsening
- a reaction to
a negative effect on the body caused by
- all walks of life
many different backgrounds
- artificially
man-made
- toxic
poisonous or dangerous
- push
concerted effort
- revellers
people who are celebrating
- organic
natural, made without artificial ingredients or chemicals