Young India’s Bhopal challenge
3 Comments
Author(s): Sunita Narain <http://downtoearth.org.in/author/3>
Issue: Jul 15, 2010

[image: image]Photograph by Sayantan BeraThe Bhopal question has one more
angle: why was there so much public and media outrage over this 25-year-old
issue? Why did the national media focus on this story, which till now had
been consigned to the backrooms where only noisy environmental activists
live?

Many things, I believe, have contributed to this outpouring of anger. One,
there is a post-Bhopal gas disaster generation in the country. These young
people do not know what happened that night or the events of the years
after. They are shocked to see the scale of human suffering and stilled by
the sheer injustice. Two, as a nation, we now recognize environmental
questions as important, indeed critical, to our health. In Bhopal we see
that chemical disaster, which is around us—in the pesticides in our food, in
the air we breathe and in the industry that pollutes with impunity. Three,
and perhaps most importantly, we see in Bhopal an utter failure of the
Indian state to protect its people. We see the complicity and failure of our
collective systems, from the executive to the judiciary.

But what riles us, more than anything else, is double standards of the big
and powerful. This is the same time when global media is flashing into
Indian homes the scenes of another devastation—the oil spill off the coast
of the US. This is the time when another top executive of another top
company, BP, is being hauled over the coals to pay for damages to the
environment and people. We also see the same US government, incensed by
homeland pollution, is so insensitive to the tragedy in faraway places
involving its own companies. The focus on how Warren Anderson, the former
chief of Union Carbide, got away that day from Bhopal and was never tried
for the knowledge he had of the accident in the making, has to be seen in
this context. A globalized world is also about equality— of intent and
action. Indians, I believe, will no more want pusillanimous action from our
leaders against big corporates, however much they may want the investment
and lifestyle these companies promise. This is why Bhopal’s sufferings have
touched this country.

But the question that bothers me is: will our collective anger, reflected in
the media, sustain till justice is done? Let us be clear, what we face are
not quick or easy tasks. The government’s own report, prepared by the
National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI), has confirmed
the findings of CSE’s pollutionmonitoring laboratory—that the factory site
is contaminated with high levels of toxins, from mercury to pesticides (see
‘Subterranean leak’, Down To Earth, October 1- 15, 2009). This is not a
small victory. The Bhopal-based activists have been fighting, indeed
screaming, about this contamination. But till date they have faced only
denial and callous and criminal dismissal.

Now the clean-up begins. The Group of Ministers has accepted that the entire
factory site—not just the stored 300-odd tonnes of waste—will have to be
cleaned. It still does not know how deep the contamination goes and how much
soil will have to be removed and then disposed of. NEERI says the only
saving grace is that because of geological conditions contamination has not
seeped into the city’s aquifers. But NEERI does confirm CSE’s finding that
some three km away, borewells have the same toxins. So there is a need to
drain these wells and treat the water. It’s no small task. This is poisoned
land. Inside a thickly populated city.

The second challenge is of holding the company liable for contamination. Dow
has issued statements saying it has nothing to do with the waste. It says
the Union Carbide Corporation (UCC) had settled all claims—in the
unfortunate and unjust settlement by the Supreme Court. It says it has no
responsibility. And it has smart lawyers—in this case, spokespersons and
leaders of the Congress and the BJP—who will find legal loopholes once
again.

This when we know the following. One, the contamination at the factory has
little to do with the accident. It is about criminal negligence of the
company when it was operating the plant. It dumped and left its waste on the
ground. Claims for this poisoning have not been settled. Two, during this
period the US company Union Carbide held operating control of the plant and
is liable for the contamination. Three, it knew of this contamination and
did nothing about it. We know now that NEERI was commissioned by UCIL in
1994 to study the site. We know that NEERI had given the report to its
client. We know this because Dow’s lawyer in his 2006 opinion admitted this:
his client knew of this report and the contamination of soil and groundwater
in 1996. But the company did nothing. Instead it handed over the land to the
state government. Now it can say it cannot be held responsible. It does not
even own the land. It is an old corporate legal tactic: confuse ownership to
convolute the liability trail. Will it work this time?

Mahatma Gandhi’s Young India has given way to another young India. Will this
young India allow travesty of justice? I hope not. I believe not. *—Sunita
Narain*
http://downtoearth.org.in/node/1433
-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist

"After a war, the silencing of arms is not enough. Peace means respecting
all rights. You can’t respect one of them and violate the others. When a
society doesn’t respect the rights of its citizens, it undermines peace and
leads it back to war.”
-- Maria Julia Hernandez


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