I/II.
From: Gopal Krishna <[email protected]>
Date: 14 June 2010 16:20



 [Attachment(s) <#129366eb23017344_1293623ed6b14c6f_TopText> from Gopal
Krishna included below]

*Press Note*

* Bhopal**’s Industrial Catastrophe Caused Due to Emergency *

* No Inquiry on US Corporation’s Research and Development (R&D) Centre so
far *

 *New Delhi**-The affidavit from Central Bureau of Investigation’s most
recent affidavit in the Court of Chief Judicial Magistrate, Bhopal* provides
information that implies that had Emergency been not imposed Bhopal’s
catastrophe caused by the US Corporation’s acts of omission and commission
would not have happened. (Relevant pages of the affidavit attached). There
is a compelling logic for an independent probe in the entire issue ranging
from granting of industrial license, escape of Warren Anderson, role of
Indo-US CEO Forum to lobbying by industrialists and ministers to absolve Dow
Chemicals of liability.

It emerges that industrial license to US Corporation’s chemicals plant was
granted during the period when Indira Gandhi as Prime Minister had invoked
Article 352 to declare Emergency in the country from 25th June 1975 to
21stMarch 1977 during 21-month
regime.  The 7th June, 2010 verdict of the Bhopal court (attached) states
that Union Carbide Corporation too refers to the application for industrial
license on page no.4. According to the CBI’s recent affidavit, on
1stJanuary 1970, Union Carbide Company had “applied for industrial
license for
manufacture of 5000 tones MIC- based pesticides” required under The
Registration and Licensing of Industrial Undertakings Rules, 1952.  An
application for the registration of an existing industrial undertaking is
made to the Ministry of Industry (formerly to Ministry of Industrial
Development), Government of India.

The application was signed by E. A. Munoz, a General Manager in the
company. The company did not get industrial license for more than 5 years.
There must have been sufficient reason to withhold permission for industrial
license. After the imposition of Emergency, the company was granted the
license on till 31st October, 1975 exactly nine years prior to her
assassination in 1984. The verdict notes that the issuance of industrial
license to Union Carbide Company for manufacture of MIC- based pesticides on
31st October, 1984.

R K Sahi, the then Deputy Director in the Ministry of Industrial Development
(former Deputy Advisor, Planning Commission) has informed that the entire
department was against grating of the industrial license. The officials in
the Ministry knew that obsolete and discarded technology and machinery was
being transferred to India for which the license was granted by bypassing
the due process. There was political interference in the granting of the
industrial license.

The manufacture of Methy Isocynate (MIC) commenced with effect from
5thFebruary, 1980, information regarding which was sent to the
Department of
Chemicals and Fertilizers vide letter dated 19th February, 1980. The company
informed the Ministry of Industrial Development on 12th November, 1982 about
the commencement of production in 1980, while requesting for renewal of
agreement that was to terminate in 1982.

The verdict by Mohan P Tiwari, Chief Judicial Magistrate, Bhopal, Madhya
Pradesh notes “Union Carbide Corporation , 39,Old Ridgebury Road Danbury
Connecticut ,USA 06817” and Union Carbide Corporation, (Eastern) Inc. 16th
Floor New World Office Building (East Wing) 24, Sabury Tsimsa Tsu Kowloon
Hongkong, as absconders. On page 25 of the verdict, it states, “(z) It is
worthwhile to mention here that the Government of India and the Team of
Scientists admittedly was never permitted to visit the Plant at Verginia,
USA. No brochure, or any other documentary evidence demonstrating the
similarity between the two plants at Verginia and Bhopal has been produced
before the court by the defence.”

On page 95 of the verdict, it is stated, “Mr. Warren Anderson, UCC USA and
UCC Kowlnn Hongkong are still absconding and therefore, every part of this
case (Criminal File) is kept intact alognwith the exhibited and unexhibited
documents and the property related to this case, in safe custody, till their
appearance.” In the verdict, it is stated that “Dr. S. Varadarajan PW57, was
the Head of the team of experts who visited the Plant Site very next day of
the incident. He is an expert having excellent qualification. M.Sc. PhD.
>From Delhi & Cambridge several Honorary D.Scs also former President all
three major Indian Academy of Science Bangalore, Indian National Academy
Delhi started by Shri M.N. Shah and Indian National Academy of Engineering
and a number of other Societies.  (q)Dr. S. Vardharajan PW57, in para 2 of
his statement states that there were several defects, such as MIC is a
liquid but it evaporates with air and is highly toxic on inhilation as it is
made of carbon monoxide. Carbon monoxide converted into Phosegen, is
required to be utilized immediately and not to be stored. Storage of MIC
should have been highly limited only to meet the requirements for conversion
into Sevin as little as possible. (r) In Para 5 he further says that the
design required inhibitor to prevent voluntary polymerization of MIC.
Polymerization produces very high temperature and that accelerates
polymerization in an explosive manner. There are design defects, such as use
of Carbon, Steel and other material and pipes and other materials. These are
leading to corrosion in the presence of even quantities of Hydrogen
Chloride, Hydrochloric Acid (HCL) arising from Phosegen, Chloroform and
other Chloride materials.” Although the design fault by the US corporation
is established, the criminal liability of the Union Carbide’s case is yet to
be settled.

It is noteworthy that Justice S Muralidhar, Delhi High Court in his seminal
paper titled “Unsettling Truths, Untold Tales: The Bhopal Gas Disaster
Victim’s ‘Twenty Years’ of Courtroom Struggles for Justice” concluded that
the cases concerning Bhopal gas disaster should not conclude till justice
has been done to every victim. Each strand of litigation is pending at
various stages and the questions that have arisen remain unsatisfactorily
answered.” He had aptly underlined in May 2004, “The extent of concealment
and subterfuge practised by UCC and UCIL in screening away from scrutiny the
extent of risk to which the MIC plant at Bhopal was subjecting the local
population. The enormous lies of the UCC and UCIL now stand exposed. It is
indeed disturbing that despite the Union of India and the State of Madhya
Pradesh knowing fully well the extent of contamination of the plant site,
neither of those entities did anything at all to enforce the liabilities of
the UCC and UCIL and claim damages under this head. The settlement which the
Supreme Court approved on February 14/ 15, 1989 stands severely flawed with
every passing day. There now appears no possible justification for the order
made on those two fateful dates. Every assumption on which the orders were
based was wrong both on facts and on law. Notwithstanding the defiant
posture of the Supreme Court in its review petition that its powers under
Article 142 justified its approval of the settlement, which foreclosed all
present and future civil and criminal claims, the court itself has had to
reject the judgment in the review proceedings as an applicable precedent for
future cases. The wrong remains an irremediable wrong. It bears repetition
that the assumptions on which the settlement is approved was that the number
of deaths was 3,000 and the number injured in the range of 1,00,000. In
March 2003, the official figures of the awarded death claims stood at 15,180
and awarded injury claims at 5,53,015. The underestimation was slightly
above 5 times. The range of compensation which was assumed in the settlement
order would be payable was Rs.1 to 3 lakhs for a death claim, Rs.25,000/- to
Rs.1 lakh for temporary disablement and Rs.50,000/- to Rs.2 lakhs for
permanent disablement. Each death claim has been awarded not more than Rs.1
lakh and on an average an injury claim has been settled for as little as
Rs.25,000/-. The failure of the judiciary to account for the views of the
Bhopal Gas victim has been pervasive.”

While the fact of Supreme Court itself being on trial following such a
litigation disaster is established, what is yet to be established is
legislative competence to ensure universal jurisprudence for corporations.
If Dow Chemicals escapes liability, if Anderson remains an absconder and
goes unpunished, it sets a dangerous precedent for democracies all over the
world.

In Volume 5, Hazard Assessment of Chemicals, published by Hemisphere
Publishing Corporation, Washington, page no. 236, it refers to suspicion
that in addition to the chemical pesticide plant, the Research and
Development (R&D) Centre that Union Carbide which operated in Bhopal since
1976 was experimenting with wartime use of chemicals. It remains shrouded in
mystery although it was reputed to be among the best in the world with the
R&D Centre having 3 green houses, 5 insect rearing laboratories and an
experimental farm of 2 hectares. The processing of new chemicals at the R&D
Centre had increased from 50 in 1980 to 500 in 1982 and the Centre was
projected to test 5000 chemicals in 1985 because many chemicals could not be
tested in USA because of stricter environmental regulations. This R&D centre
too came up during Emergency. This i*ndustrial disaster has aptly been
called the Nagasaki and Hiroshima of peace time but the suspicion regarding
it being a consequence of experimenting with time chemicals is yet to be
probed.
*

By the end of First World War, Union Carbide Corporation (which has merged
with Dow Chemicals in 2001) had moved from metal and carbon to gases and
chemicals and expanded to atomic energy production during Second World War.
Its operations in India began in 1905 in Calcutta. It had dry cell
manufacturing plant in Chennai in 1942 and in Hyderabad in 1967. In 1968,
the agricultural office of the company had moved from Mumbai to Bhopal. At
the time of Bhopal disaster it was the 7th largest company in the world
headquartered at Danbury, Connecticut, USA with 700 operations in 38
countries.

For Details: Gopal Krishna, ToxicsWatch Alliance, Mb: 9818089660,

E-mail: [email protected], Blog: toxicsatch.blogspot.com, Web:
www.toxicswatch.com

 __._,_.___

Attachment(s) from Gopal Krishna

1 of 1 File(s)
  UCIL.pdf <http://xa.yimg.com/kq/groups/8951350/625681332/name/UCIL%2Epdf>

II.
http://www.deccanherald.com/content/75035/conspiracy-politics-betrayal.html

<http://www.deccanherald.com/content/75035/conspiracy-politics-betrayal.html>
Conspiracy,
politics and betrayalColin Gonsalves
*“The victims should approach the Supreme Court directly for review of the
1996 order.”*

The paltry payments made to the victims, the escape of Anderson on a
government plane, the neglect of the babies born subsequently with terrible
deformities and ailments, the inability of the state to clean the
contaminated soil, the petty sentences rendered and the 26 long years in the
trial court, all seems separate instances which though regrettable are
treated as issues of governance and not one of politics, conspiracy and
betrayal. Let’s not look at the past, we are advised, let’s look to the
future to ensure that such an incident does not take place again. But unless
we understand the treachery of the past it is impossible to change things
for the future.

*Rajiv’s American connect *
Indira Gandhi's death and the appointment of Rajiv Gandhi as Prime Minister
of India marked the end of the era of the Indian version of social democracy
started by Jawahar Lal Nehru and the beginning of American style
globalisation. Rajiv Gandhi started off well with Ronald Reagan, the then
President of United States. It is said that the understanding between these
two leaders ultimately led to the pitiable settlement being agreed to by
India, the quashing of all criminal liability and the removal of Anderson
from Indian soil. Arjun Singh, naturally, will be made the scapegoat as if
decisions of this magnitude could be taken without the Prime Minister's
approval.

In the power play of globalised politics, all this is understandable though
it may make us angry. But the inability of the Supreme Court of India to
stand firm and side with the people of India against UCC and the government
of the United States of America left many Indians confused and frustrated.
The long line of decisions starting from 1989 ultimately left them bitter.

*American system better*
It was in the interests of the victims to have the cases tried in America
where substantial damage would have been awarded. In the Exxon Valdez oil
spill case where no one died, $507 million was awarded. In the Vioxx drug
case where 47,000 consumers suffered heart attacks, strokes or death, $ 4.85
billion was paid on an average of $103,000 per plaintiff. In asbestos
litigation, jury verdicts range anywhere from $ one million to $20 million
in compensation per person. In the Lockerbie bombing case Libya paid  $ 2.7
billion or $ 10 million per family.

Legal luminaries flocking to represent Dow Chemicals was understandable.
Nani Palkhiwala made a strenuous attempt by filing affidavits in the
American courts to have the litigation brought to India. The then Attorney
General, Soli Sorabjee, argued against giving the victims a hearing and
justified the quashing of criminal proceedings. What was inexplicable was
the attitude of the judiciary.

In February 1989, in a cryptic three-page order containing no reasons, the
Supreme Court accepted the settlement of $ 470 million as "just, equitable
and reasonable" and quashed all criminal proceedings. In May, reasons were
given after an afterthought. Chief Justice R S Pathak then resigned on being
nominated by India to the World Court at The Hague.

After indignant protests in the country, in 1991, the Supreme Court
reinstated the criminal proceedings. In 1996, the Supreme Court quashed the
charges of culpable homicide not amounting to murder and voluntarily causing
grievous hurt and introduced the death due to criminal negligence charge
carrying a maximum sentence of two years. The hands of the trial court were
tied. It is now up to the Chief Justice of India to right this historic
wrong.
*
SC must reopen*
The Supreme Court must reopen the 1996 decision diluting the criminal
charges and reinstate the culpable homicide charge and the charge of
voluntarily causing grievous hurt. If this is done the accused can be
sentenced up to 10 years in prison.
(The writer is a senior advocate of
the Supreme Court.)

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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