http://www.greenpeace.org/international_en/news/details?news_id=95504

How low can Dow go? 
Dow sues penniless Bhopal survivors 
  
Mon 23 December 2002 
 

 
In a stunning example of corporate insensibility, Dow Chemical, the worlds largest 
chemical company, and new owners of Union Carbide is to sue survivors of the 1984 
Union Carbide gas disaster in Bhopal, India. While the site of the disaster lies 
covered in toxic waste and survivors struggle with continuing ill health and deadly 
pollution from the site, Dow has decided to add to their woes with a Indian lawsuit. 

 
Yes that's right - the very people Dow should be helping are now facing a lawsuit from 
one of the world most powerful corporations. Why are they acting in such an amazingly 
perverse manner? On December 2nd a peaceful march of 200 women survivors from Bhopal 
delivered toxic waste from the abandoned Carbide factory back to Dow's Indian 
headquarters in Bombay with the demand that Dow take responsibility for the disaster 
and clean up the site. Dow obviously has other ideas because they are suing survivors 
for about US$10,000 for "loss of work". That's US$10,000 compensation demanded for a 
two hour peaceful protest where only one Dow employee briefly ventured out of the 
Mumbai corporate business park to meet the women protestors.

Satyu, a Bhopal activist and one of the protestors charged by Dow highlighted how 
ridiculous this "loss of work" claim is: "Thousands of us lost their lives, many more 
have not been able to do our jobs for the last 18 years and 150,000 people in Bhopal 
are still suffering ill health because of the Union Carbide gas tragedy in 1984. Even 
today people die and children are born with gas related diseases. It is outrageous 
that Dow is charging us US$10,000 and tries to shut us down from seeking justice from 
them".

The damages demanded by Dow will amount to about 10 years income for the survivors 
charged but is less than one days sales revenue for Dow. Also Dow is seeking to 
silence protest by demanding that survivors be banned from holding protests within 
100m of Dow offices in India. 

Dow has just appointed a new CEO, William Stravopoulos, who engineered the Dow merger 
with Union Carbide in 2001. If this lawsuit is how he intends to deal with the ongoing 
Bhopal disaster then it will be a huge public relations own goal. Dow proudly 
proclaims it slogan as "living improved daily". How does that fit with the suing of 
poor protestors who have a real grievance with the company?

 
 

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http://sixdigit.swiki.net

On Wed, 25 Dec 2002 13:07:35  
 sean henry wrote:



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