Thousands of activists form human chain at Pepsi, Coke plants in India
MANDIDEEP, India (AFP) Jan 20, 2005

Thousands of students and farmers on Thursday surrounded Pepsi and
Coca-Cola factories in a "Quit India" campaign, accusing the US giants
of selling soft drinks laced with pesticides.

They lined up shoulder-to-shoulder in a five-kilometre (three-mile)
chain around a Pepsi bottling plant at this central Indian township,
an AFP correspondent reported.

The Research Foundation for Science, Technology and Ecology (RFSTE),
which organised the protests, said nearly 100,000 people targeted more
than 80 soft drink plants across India.

Villagers and onlookers joined in at Mandideep as several thousand
protestors carried banners demanding the closure of both companies in
India.

"The factories must close down as they are not only are guilty of
uncertain standards in their drinks but they are also depleting
groundwater," said protester Vinay Sagar.

"We are very worried by the continuous degradation which the company
has caused to the groundwater in the region," said Sagar, saying Pepsi
daily extracts 200,000 litres (40,000 gallons) of ground water from
the parched region.

Mandideep is some 20 kilometres (12 miles) from the central Indian
city of Bhopal, which 20 years ago was devastated by the world's
deadliest industrial disaster when toxic gas leaked from a Union
Carbide pesticides plant killing thousands.

Most of the protestors then moved to Pilukhedi, some 40
kilometresmiles) the other side of Bhopal, where they surrounded a
Coca-Cola factory -- one of the biggest bottling plants in the
country.

RFSTE reported similar protests at Pepsi and Coke plants in cities
such as Bombay, capital of western Maharastra state, But a Pepsi
spokeswoman said about 20 schoolchildren turned up at one of the
company's 37 plants in western India.

In December the Supreme Court upheld a lower court judgement ordering
Pepsi and Coca-Cola to print warnings on their bottles in India that
the drinks may contain pesticide residues.

The US firms deny their drinks pose health hazards.

The cola rivals, which account for 99 percent of India's huge soft
drinks market, have joined forces in the two-year legal battle that
rumbles on.

Their lawyers said use of pesticides in agriculture resulted in trace
residues in sugar.

The US drinks manufacturers are not only under fire over pesticide
residues but also over allegations they are draining areas of
groundwater.

Attempts to close a Coca-Cola plant in drought-hit Plachimada village
in southern Kerala state have become an environmental cause celebre.

Environmentalists charge it is extracting groundwater and parching the
region where farmers have been badly hit, but the companies say they
use a miniscule amount of water.

The "Quit India" slogan used by the environmentalists was coined by
Mahatma Gandhi in 1942 during the struggle against British colonial
rule.


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