date:Apr 03, 2014
f his exposure to Nemagon. The man added that medical examinations apparently to determine sterility by the National Insurance Institute (INS), which has provided compensation to some workers, are inhuman.
Nemagon was banned in the United States in 1979 after the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) determined the pesticide was a carcinogen and caused sterility in male mammals, including humans.
The pesticide is also known to contaminate groundwater, even years after its use is discontinue