During the Soviet-era, Sumgait was the paradigm for communist industrialization. Over 45,000 workers toiled in the factories and chemical plants that sprawled across the vast, desert landscape of the Apsheron Peninsula. Their labor churned out immeasurable amounts of aluminum, fertilizers, synthetic rubbers, industrial detergents, ammonia, heavy metals, chlorine, acids, all of which were voraciously consumed by the insatiable Soviet economy. In their haste to modernize, production quotas trumped environmental safeguards. Efficiency was prized over all else; human lives were tacitly relegated to a subservient level. The inevitable industrial waste produced was shipped to the city dump, or just piled high in a vacant lot and forgotten about.
The Soviet's myopic policies have left a chilling legacy in Sumgait: unprecedented ecological ruin. The corollary of their negligence is that over 70% of the city's residents are afflicted by some ailment associated with environmental pollution or factory working conditions.
But it is the children who have suffered the most. The CIA estimates an infant mortality rate of 81.74 per thousand live births. The Azeri government modifies the rubric by giving the statistic per population. Thus, they come up with a significantly lower and less alarming statistic: 25 infant deaths per thousand. Statistical manipulation aside, the cumulative effects of the environment on the Apsheron Peninsula's residents are astounding. Over half of the city's children suffer from asthma, and the rate of defects on development hovers at around 60 per thousand.



