Fighting on the blood-stained deck of his wrecked ship and
asked to surrender John Paul Jones, the naval hero not the rock star, famously said:
I haven’t started fighting yet. Hearing which one marine said “There’s always
one son of a bitch who hasn’t got the word.”
Much the same can be said of the Madras Mosquito. While the
city corporation has said that it is “happy” with a recent report that says
that the mosquito menace has been brought under control (The New Indian Express
– City Express May 13) nobody seems to have told this to the small bombers.
The reason for this complacency seems to be that only ten
complaints regarding mosquitoes were registered in ten days of March against the 87
received in the corresponding period last year.
Don’t ask me who. I too am
flabbergasted that somebody actually expected action and took the
trouble to complain.
Unfortunately for the Corporation, data suggest otherwise. A sample
survey - undertaken by the Indian Public Health Association (IPHA), Tamil Nadu
chapter, on mosquito species in the city - revealed a high density of the
Armigeres species in several pockets of north Chennai.
It may be of little comfort to know that these mosquitoes do
not transmit diseases like their Anopheles and Aedes kin since the study warns,
“their bites are painful”. Like we didn’t know.
IPHA also had other helpful factoids. “The Armigeres
mosquitoes are a little bigger than the usual ones. They are six millimetres
long and have a flying distance of 500 to 750 metres. They can fly up to 500
metres high. They also make some kind of a noise which can disrupt sleep,
especially that of infants.”
Yeah right. Sleep disruption is our main worry
considering that the City Corporation seems to be talking in tongues, much like
one touched by the divine hand of insanity.
Before warning on the perils of dengue and giving hints on
how to spot it, its website warns that the city “has become an endemic area for
malaria since few decades. Nearly 70% of the malaria cases recorded in the
State of Tamil Nadu is occurring in Chennai City alone.
“The problem is more acute in North-east coastal areas like
Tondiarpet, Washermanpet, Royapuram, Harbour, Muthialpet, Mannady, Sowcarpet,
Elephant Gate, Periamet, Pattalam and Pulianthope.
“These mosquitoes were also found in abundance in several
parts of north Chennai, including Korukkupet, Washermenpet, Otteri, Mint,
Pulianthope, Vyasarpadi, Pattalam, Tondiarpet and Kasimedu,” it says.
Unfortunately for us, Madras saw short spells of rain in the
last three days which have already left small puddles in and around houses and
on the roadsides.
With three major waterways and sixteen minor drains heavily
polluted, Madras is hoping that the 40 degree heat wave that has been indicated
will turn out to be a blessing in disguise, drying up the stagnating pools.
Better to sweat and stink than be cool and dead.
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