Not just plachimada , Coca - Cola is killing millions of people everyday and 
Sasi Tarur 
 
speaks for this  poison . I took Coca cola only once in my life ; just after 
drinking that ,I got 
 
abdominal pain . 
 
So not just plachimada , we should start a wide spread campaign against this 
poison . 
 
 
 
--- On Mon, 23/3/09, Anivar Aravind <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Anivar Aravind <[email protected]>
Subject: [GreenYouth] Join 'No Coca-Cola Spokespersons for Indian Parliament' 
campaign on Facebook
To: "Greenyouth" <[email protected]>, "FOIL LIST" <[email protected]>, 
"Invites" <[email protected]>
Date: Monday, 23 March, 2009, 6:06 PM


Join 'No Coca-Cola Spokespersons for Parliament' on Facebook at 
http://is.gd/ouhi.


Shashi Tharoor is a Member of the Advisory Board of Coca-Cola India Foundation, 
the PR face of a company that destroyed the environment and lives of people 
around its plant in Plachimada, Kerala.

He speaks for the criminal company and ridicules people's fight for their lives 
and livelihood.

Now he is seeking to represent the people of Kerala in Indian Parliament from 
Thiruvananthapuram.

This is a chance for us to show our support for the struggle of people in 
Plachimada by not sending a spokesperson for the Coca-Cola company to the 
Indian Parliament.

Read more one this issue,

An Open Letter to Shashi Tharoor:
http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth/msg/2f60091d948ac4e9

An Open Response to "an Open Letter to Shashi Tharoor":
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/shashi-tharoor/an-open-response-to-an-op_b_170172.html

An Open Reply to Shashi Tharoor:
http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth/msg/6a09b6a15653654b

Coca Cola/Plachimada: An open rejoinder to Mr Shashi Tharoor:
http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth/msg/651f28b01205e702

Providing the Facts for Mr. Tharoor on Coca-Cola in India
==================================
Mr. Tharoor:

I read with amazement your letter defending your role as an advisor to the 
Coca-Cola India Foundation.

I was amazed because you have completely misstated the facts relating to the 
shutdown Coca-Cola bottling plant in Plachimada and the company's bottling 
plants elsewhere in India.

As an advisor to the Coca-Cola India Foundation, along with your own proclaimed 
inquiry into the matter surrounding Coca-Cola's operations in India, it is 
incumbent upon you to be aware of the facts of matter and state them as such.

Not only have you failed in stating the facts, but it is dismaying to note that 
you repeat the same defense of Coca-Cola's operations in India as the Coca-Cola 
company itself!

For your benefit, and more importantly, the public in India, I would like to 
respond to your letter with the appropriate facts.


Scoring Political Points?You accuse the authors of the open letter, Mr. 
Swaminathan and Mr. Ajayan, of attempting to "score political points" by 
releasing the open letter to the media and internet forums prior to you 
receiving the letter. An open letter is just that - a letter intended to be 
read by a wider audience. It is not unusual to see such open letters making the 
rounds in internet forums and the media prior to reaching the specific person 
it is addressed to. And even a cursory internet search of open letters 
alongside your name reveals that you are well accustomed to such communication. 
The intent of the open letter was to highlight to the larger public the 
problems the authors see with your association with the Coca-Cola company and 
the foundation, especially in the context of you "nurturing political 
ambition." Mr. Tharoor, if anybody is trying to score political points, it 
seems to be you. Just a week after your response, we read in the Yale
 Daily News dated March 5, 2009 that "Tharoor confirmed that he is planning to 
run for a position in India's lower house of Parliament, and said an official 
announcement would be released "in a week to 10 days."" And the confirmation of 
your political run, strangely enough, came at a lecture at Yale University 
which was sponsored by the Coca-Cola World Fund! It is you who is running for 
political office, not the authors of the open letter to you. You used your 
response to lay out your views on the political climate in Kerala, asserted 
your identity as a Keralite, stated your commitment to increasing corporate 
investment in the state, the need to make it more business friendly, faulted 
the current negative image of Kerala, bemoaned the trend of workers having to 
seek jobs in the Gulf and elsewhere, asserted the need for safe drinking water 
for the state of Kerala, and even managed to throw in "energy resources, waste 
management, and the development of
 backward areas" - all very appropriate content for someone making a run for 
political office. But you got the facts about Coca-Cola's operations wrong. 
Coca-Cola India Foundation, Coca-Cola Company, Coca-Cola India?You go to great 
lengths in your response to try to differentiate, unsuccessfully, between the 
Coca-Cola India Foundation, on whose advisory board you serve, and the 
Coca-Cola Company. Mr. Tharoor, as someone who has been very involved in the 
campaigns against Coca-Cola in India for over seven years now, I am keenly 
aware of the declared differences between the two bodies. But the facts are as 
follows:


The Coca-Cola India Foundation was set up by the Coca-Cola company on December 
3, 2007.
The Coca-Cola India Foundation was set up with an initial funding of USD 10 
million by the Coca-Cola company. 
The announcement was made on Coca-Cola company letterhead, including the absurd 
"Little Drops of Joy" caption.
The only two quotes provided in the announcement were by Mr. Muhtar Kent, 
President and COO, Coca-Cola company and Mr. Atul Singh, President & CEO, 
Coca-Cola India.
Close to half the announcement of the foundation was about what the Coca-Cola 
company and Coca-Cola India (not the foundation) does.
The contacts listed for further information were the public relations company 
for Coca-Cola India. 
The Coca-Cola India Foundation focuses on areas that the Coca-Cola company has 
decided.
The Coca-Cola India Foundation would cease to exist were it not for the funding 
from the Coca-Cola company itself.
The fact of the matter is that the Coca-Cola India Foundation is an integral 
part of the Coca-Cola family and its primary purpose is to manufacture a 
"green" and "benevolent" image of the Coca-Cola company and its products in 
India, never mind what the reality on the ground may be. In your response, you 
claim that "the purpose of encouraging such a Foundation is precisely to ensure 
that the company looks beyond its commercial bottom-line and serves the people 
of our country." The Coca-Cola company is a for profit corporation whose 
primary (and sole) purpose is to maximize profits for its shareholders. The 
Coca-Cola company neither has the expertise, nor has it been invited, to serve 
the development needs of the people of our country. Providing safe drinking 
water to the Indian population, as you suggest being one of the Foundation's 
concrete projects, is out of Coca-Cola's realm. The company bottles water and 
puts a price on it, making a product that
 remains unaffordable for too many Indians - exactly the opposite of providing 
safe, drinking water to all. Let us not forget that it has taken the Coca-Cola 
company until now - sixteen years after it started operations in India - to set 
up a foundation with an intention of preserving water and the environment. Is 
this a proactive approach, as you claim? Hardly. The decision to set up the 
Coca-Cola India Foundation is not so much the result of altruistic intentions 
of the Coca-Cola company as it is a strategic move on the part of the company 
to deflect attention away from the growing discontent with its operations in 
India. It is also interesting to note that the focus of the Coca-Cola India 
Foundation, set by the Coca-Cola company, are water, environment, healthy 
living and social advancement - exactly the areas in which the Coca-Cola 
company is being challenged in India. Why worker's safety and rights are not 
included are beyond our grasp. But if there
 was to be a vibrant labour campaign against Coca-Cola, be assured that the 
Coca-Cola company would ensure that the Coca-Cola India Foundation include 
worker's rights in their area of focus. 
Coca-Cola's Pollution Confirmed by StateYou claim that you are fully aware that 
groundwater exploitation and pollution led to the closure of the Coca-Cola 
bottling plant in Plachimada in 2004, yet you claim that you are "unable to 
understand the scientific basis" behind the charges being leveled against 
Coca-Cola in Plachimada. It is absolutely unconscionable that you remain 
ignorant of the facts surrounding Coca-Cola's operations in Plachimada, yet you 
have the audacity to respond with such confidence to the original authors of 
the open letter! Mr. Tharoor, why do you suppose that the Coca-Cola bottling 
plant in Plachimada, one of Coca-Cola's largest in India, remains shut down? 
The Coca-Cola bottling plant in Plachimada remains shut down because the Kerala 
State Pollution Control Board (KSPCB ) has refused to issue the "Consent to 
Operate" to the Coca-Cola company. On August 19, 2005, the Kerala State 
Pollution Control Board rejected Coca-Cola's
 application, and directed "the Company to stop production of all kinds of 
products with immediate effect." The KSPCB rejected Coca-Cola's application 
because it found unacceptably high levels of cadmium in Coca-Cola's sludge 
(more than 400 to 600% cadmium beyond the permissible limit). The KSPCB also 
established that the groundwater in the vicinity of the bottling plant had been 
contaminated with cadmium as a result of high levels of cadmium in Coca-Cola's 
sludge as well as effluent. Specifically, the KSPCB order dated August 19, 2005 
said, "Since the functioning of the Company in the present manner causes severe 
environmental problems, including poisoning/contamination of well water, the 
undersigned, by invoking the powers conferred under Section 25(4), 27(2) and 33 
A of the Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1974 refuses to issue 
the consent to operate and, by rejecting the defective application submitted by 
the Company to stop
 production of all kinds of products with immediate effect." The Kerala State 
Pollution Control Board's decision was based on scientific studies that it 
conducted on the samples it took from and around the Coca-Cola bottling plant. 
Alarmingly, in international venues where we continue to challenge them, 
Coca-Cola company officials have repeatedly said that there is no scientific 
basis for proving the pollution allegations against them. It is exactly the 
same defense you are claiming - lack of scientific basis. Are you suggesting 
that KSPCB's technical studies are not "scientific" enough for you? Mr. 
Tharoor, we have come to expect such disregard for state government agencies 
such as the KSPCB from companies like Coca-Cola that operate with impunity in 
India. For a person such as yourself, who is in the hunt for political office 
representing the people of Kerala, it is extremely unfortunate that you toe the 
same line as the Coca-Cola company, in spite of
 the scientific evidence by the state government against it confirming that it 
pollutes the groundwater. In the event that the Coca-Cola company has not 
shared the KSPCB "stop production" notice in you personal inquiry, you can see 
it here - http://www.indiaresource.org/documents/kspcbAug192005.pdf It is also 
worth noting that a formidable community mobilization took place in and around 
Plachimada to bring attention to Coca-Cola's abuses and challenge them. The 
actions of the state were a result of the public mobilization, without which it 
is very possible that the Coca-Cola company would have continued its ways in 
Plachimada. And in the interest of educating yourself so as to better advise 
the Foundation, I would suggest that you also obtain the study of sludge 
conducted by the Central Pollution Control Board of Coca-Cola bottling plants 
in 2003. It is an alarming conclusion, to say the least. For at least 10 years, 
it seems the Coca-Cola company was
 distributing its toxic waste as fertilizer to the farmers around its bottling 
plants. I would be curious to know if you would question the "scientific basis" 
of the Central Pollution Control Board study as well, which included 
Plachimada. 
Coca-Cola's Water Extraction Restricted by Court, Case PendingIn your response, 
you note that "a Division Bench of the Kerala High Court ruled, in a judgment 
dated 7 August 2005, that the company was not guilty of unfairly exploiting the 
groundwater, and that indeed the groundwater in Plachimada continued to dry up 
after the company ceased operations, leading the Court to conclude that other 
factors, including a shortage of rainfall, were to blame." Once again, Mr. 
Tharoor, you adopt exactly the same defense that the Coca-Cola company does 
when it comes to defending charges of water depletion in Plachimada, raising 
serious doubts about the integrity of your fact-finding. First, and very 
importantly, it MUST be noted that the High Court judgment that you and 
Coca-Cola reference is currently being heard by the Supreme Court of India. As 
such, there is no resolution on whether Coca-Cola was unfairly exploiting the 
groundwater. It is premature, and I would
 suggest, irresponsible, to conclude that Coca-Cola was "not guilty of unfairly 
exploiting the groundwater", as you have done. It is noteworthy that while 
Coca-Cola makes mention of this particular 2005 High Court judgment on their 
website, there is no mention whatsoever of the case currently pending in the 
Supreme Court of India. Secondly, and still quite importantly, the High Court 
judgment that you reference actually placed RESTRICTIONS on groundwater 
withdrawal by the Coca-Cola company, by no means a business as usual matter. 
The judgment actually restricted Coca-Cola's water withdrawals by 75% of what 
it had originally been permitted. The High Court judgment even mentioned that 
Coca-Cola could not withdraw any water if the rainfalls were below 30% of 
average. And yes, water levels in Plachimada have continued to drop even after 
Coca-Cola ceased operations. This, in and by itself, does in no way absolve the 
Coca-Cola company's operations in the area
 of any wrongdoing. In fact, it begs the question as to why the Coca-Cola 
company located its bottling plant in Plachimada in the first place, given that 
Plachimada lies in the rain shadow region of Pallakad? In other words, if the 
water conditions were already difficult to begin with, why did a beverage 
company with a massive thirst for water locate itself in that area? 
Coca-Cola Implicated in Other Parts of IndiaIn your response, you do not 
address Coca-Cola's operations in Kala Dera and Mehdiganj, even though the open 
letter to you clearly made reference to them "for similar destruction of 
environment, water and livelihoods." Mr. Tharoor, the Coca-Cola company's 
indiscriminate practices are not just confined to Plachimada, as was noted in 
the open letter to you. In fact, Plachimada points towards a pattern by the 
Coca-Cola company of regularly abusing water resources in some of the areas 
where it operates. You have completely failed to acknowledge the pending 
problems created by the Coca-Cola company in Kala Dera in Rajasthan and 
Mehdiganj in Uttar Pradesh. As an advisor to the Coca-Cola India Foundation, 
you should be well aware of the issues surrounding Coca-Cola's practices in 
these areas. The community of Kala Dera has challenged the Coca-Cola bottling 
plant since 2003, making it very clear that the company's
 operations had exacerbated the water crisis in the area, and that Coca-Cola 
must shut down its plant. In 2006, the Coca-Cola company was forced to agree to 
an independent assessment of its operations in India as a result of our 
campaign in the US. The assessment - paid for by Coca-Cola - was released in 
January 2008, and only looked at six bottling plants. The assessment was a 
scathing indictment of Coca-Cola's operations. The assessment, conducted by the 
Energy and Resources Institute (TERI), an ally of Coca-Cola, saved its 
strongest language for Kala Dera. The assessment confirmed that the Kala Dera 
"plant is located in a water-scarce, drought-prone area" and that the water 
extraction by Coca-Cola has "significant impacts" on Kala Dera. The assessment 
went on to conclude that the Kala Dera "plant's operations in this area would 
continue to be one of the contributors to a worsening water situation and a 
source of stress to the communities around." The
 assessment made four recommendations to Coca-Cola for the Kala Dera plant - 
including shutting down the plant - all of which made clear that Coca-Cola must 
not use the groundwater in Kala Dera anymore. The four recommendations were:


Transport water from the nearest aquifer that may not be stressed
Store water from low-stress seasons 
Relocate the plant to a water-surplus area 
Shut down this facility 
Needless to say, the community of Kala Dera welcomed the recommendations. But 
one summer has come and gone, and as another summer approaches - when the water 
shortages are most pronounced - and Coca-Cola continues its operations in Kala 
Dera. Mr. Tharoor, the Coca-Cola company has decided to ignore the findings and 
the subsequent recommendations on Kala Dera, very similar to what you seem to 
have chosen to done in your response. Coca-Cola's continued operations in Kala 
Dera also violate the precautionary principle that the company has ostensibly 
agreed to uphold - as a condition to joining the UN Global Compact, which you 
mention. Coca-Cola knows, without a doubt, that continued operations in Kala 
Dera "would continue to be one of the contributors to a worsening water 
situation and a source of stress to the communities around." Yet, the company 
operates. Coca-Cola's operations in Kala Dera make a mockery of the UN Global 
Compact and lends credence to the
 criticism that the voluntary guidelines of the Global Compact are ineffective. 
We are now faced with absurd public relations exercises from the Coca-Cola 
company under the guise of corporate social responsibility. It has announced 
drip water irrigation initiatives with 15 farmers in the area to respond to the 
recommendations - in a village of 10,000! In your response, you mention that 
your role as an advisor to the Coca-Cola India Foundation is to "ensure that 
the company looks beyond its commercial bottom-line and serves the people of 
our country." Then perhaps you can begin with asking Coca-Cola to choose one of 
the recommendations of the TERI assessment. After all, why pay for a study if 
you are not going to abide by the findings and the recommendations? And while 
you are at it, perhaps you can also ask Coca-Cola to share the Environmental 
Impact Assessment it says it conducted, but refuses to share, citing "legal and 
confidential" reasons. Similar
 to Plachimada, one of the salient features of the Kala Dera bottling facility 
is that it was located in an area that was already experiencing water 
shortages. The Central Ground Water Board of India had assessed the area as 
"overexploited" in its groundwater resources in 1998, yet Coca-Cola started 
their bottling plant in 2000. That Coca-Cola's bottling operations further 
exacerbated the already existing water crisis was to be expected. In Mehdiganj 
in Uttar Pradesh, the TERI assessment warned Coca-Cola of deteriorating water 
conditions, and has found an alarming increase in pollution as one gets closer 
to the Coca-Cola bottling plant - validating what the community has been saying 
all along. Mr. Tharoor, Coca-Cola's problems in India are far from over, and 
this is primarily because Coca-Cola has committed wrongs in India and instead 
of incorporating genuine operational changes to the way it conducts its 
business in India, the company has resorted to
 addressing the growing opposition against its plants through its public 
relations department. The Coca-Cola India Foundation, who you advise, is part 
of the public relations exercise and yet another attempt by the Coca-Cola 
company to try to deflect attention from the very real crises it has created in 
India. Sure, water conservation initiatives in India and around the world are 
welcome, and massive water guzzlers like the Coca-Cola company should be at the 
forefront of cutting down their inefficient water usage. But they must first 
walk the walk before they can talk the talk. Genuinely addressing the crises it 
continues to create in India would be a positive first step. Appointing 
celebrity advisors such as yourself to their Coca-Cola India Foundation is not. 
Amit Srivastava
India Resource Center
www.IndiaResource.org


http://www.indiaresource.org/campaigns/coke/2009/ircresponse.html
===============
More

Response to Mr. Tharoor by S. Faizi, Environmental Expert Member of the Kerala 
Groundwater Authority
http://www.indiaresource.org/campaigns/coke/2009/faizi.html


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