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  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Niloufer Bhagwat 
  To: [email protected] ; ial central 
  Sent: Monday, March 05, 2012 6:25 PM
  Subject: Re: [humanrights-movement:5627] We will carry the torch of Bhopal to 
London's Olympic Games


   Dow Chemicals apart from its role in respect of the take  over of the assets 
of  Union Carbide in Bhopal is a war criminal . Kindly read about  the 
activities of this Company in respect of Agent Orange among other chemicals 
used to devastate countries in furtherance of the war agenda .

                   Niloufer  Bhagwat
    ----- Original Message -----     
    From: Kamayani 
    To: undisclosed-recipients: 
    Sent: Saturday, March 03, 2012 10:55 PM
    Subject: [humanrights-movement:5627] We will carry the torch of Bhopal to 
London's Olympic Games




    Why is Dow Chemical being allowed to sponsor this year's Olympics, when 
there are so many unanswered questions?


    Indra Sinha 
    guardian.co.uk, Friday 2 March 2012 22.30 GMT 
     

    "What on earth possessed Locog to drag a foreign corporation with a 
controversial history into Britain's 'greenest ever' games?" Illustration: Jim 
Sillavan for the Guardian

    This week has been surreal. On Monday, at 7.30am, the phone rang. It was 
Farah and Tim, friends from Brighton who help run our tiny Bhopal Medical 
Appeal. They said Mike Bonanno of activist network the Yes Men had just phoned 
to say we must drop everything and go straight to the Frontline Club in London. 
WikiLeaks was about to release a number of secret intelligence reports in which 
we were all named. A private intelligence agency has been spying on us for 
handlers at Dow Chemical.

    How bizarre. I'd forgotten I was an activist. What of the others? What 
could Dow be hoping to find? Much named in the reports is Colin Toogood, a 
qualified architect turned DJ who has been doing wonderful work with damaged 
children in Bhopal.

    Then there are "the Edwards", as Dow's anti-activist squad calls them. Tim, 
back in 1999, cycled from Brighton to Bhopal to raise money for our free 
clinic. In the city's gas-affected slums he met a pretty Bhopal girl 
translating for a foreign film crew. She liked him, and instantly and 
inevitably they fell in love. She turned out to be a princess, the 
great-granddaughter of the last begum (queen) of Bhopal.

    If this sounds like the fantasy of a desperate Hollywood screenwriter, 
imagine pitching the story of Bhopal to a studio producer. Nobody would believe 
it.

    For almost 30 years, some of the poorest people on earth, sick, living on 
the edge of starvation, without funds, friends or political influence, have 
found themselves struggling for their lives against one of the world's richest 
corporations, backed by the governments, military and economic elites of two of 
the world's most powerful nations.

    The corporation has it all – wealth, power, political influence, top 
American and Indian lawyers, PR companies, the ear of presidents, prime 
ministers and legislators, the power to twist arms, bend policy to its will, 
and manipulate the courts and laws of two countries to evade justice in either.

    The "nothing people", literally, have nothing. Their efforts to obtain 
medical help and justice have been opposed and obstructed in every possible 
way. It's David against an army of Goliaths.

    The Bhopal survivors, thrown back on their own resources, made the pleasant 
discovery that the slums were full of talent. Out of this poorest of 
communities came a flowering of science, art and political intelligence. They 
taught themselves medicine, environmental science, law and politics. They 
learned the art of forensic investigation, and some of their detective work has 
the dramatic edge of a Le Carré thriller.

    Neglected by every authority that had a duty of care, they have practised 
kindness and compassion, opened two free award-winning clinics, and brought 
healing to thousands.

    Union Carbide, whose gases killed their families and whose abandoned 
chemicals contaminated their drinking water, has never been brought to justice. 
Carbide has now merged into Dow, but Dow disclaims responsibility for Carbide's 
undischarged Bhopal liabilities – including criminal charges relating to 25,000 
deaths.

    What have we "activists" been doing? Trying to tell this story to the 
world, and to ask good-hearted people, who believe in justice and fair play, to 
help.

    Last year saw the arrival among the ranks of Dow's rich and powerful allies 
of the International Olympic Committee, and the London 2012 organisers Locog, 
headed by a British milord, the erstwhile Seb Coe. What on earth possessed Coe 
and Locog to drag a foreign corporation with a controversial history into 
Britain's "greenest ever" games?

    In vain it seems, India's government, the Indian Olympics Association, 
Indian athletes, as well as Bhopal survivors, have protested at the inclusion 
of Dow, deeply mired in the Bhopal disaster.

    When Locog uncritically repeats Dow's PR statements, varying them by hardly 
a word, when those same statements are being challenged in court by the Indian 
government, they are in effect finding for Dow before the court has even sat.

    The media in the UK and elsewhere could do a lot more to investigate the 
things that Dow says. In particular, here are the questions everyone should 
ask: who controls Union Carbide; why does Carbide not answer the criminal 
charges; whose chemicals are causing the current poisoning?

    Finally, for the benefit of Dow and Coe, here is my own deepest 
understanding of what Bhopal is about, and the reason why I will never abandon 
the people of Bhopal.

    A great catastrophe, followed by years of illness, poverty and injustice, 
can overwhelm and crush the human spirit, or can enable ordinary people to 
discover that they are extraordinary. Such people find that they have the grit 
to survive, the defiance to face their persecutors, and the courage to fight 
back. Out of shared struggle, even in the midst of terrible sickness, comes 
strength, the joy of friendship, the realisation that they are not weak, 
powerless or contemptible, but possessed of great power – the power to bring 
about political change, to do real good in their community and in the world.


    No one knows how this story will end, but it won't be over until we enter 
and become part of it.

    
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/mar/02/torch-bhopal-london-olympics-dow-chemical?fb=native&CMP=FBCNETTXT9038

    -- 

    Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
    +919820749204
    skype-lawyercumactivist

         

    Hey folks, coined this term ” Kracktivism “, check out my blog   
http://kractivist.wordpress.com/Kracktivism


    Blog for girl child-  http://fassmumbai.wordpress.com/  



    https://twitter.com/#!/Kracktivist



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    I carry a torch in one hand
    And a bucket of water in the other:
    With these things I am going to set fire to Heaven
    And put out the flames of Hell
    So that voyagers to God can rip the veils
    And see the real goal.......
    Rabia (Rabi'a Al-'Adawiyya)





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