By: *Soutik 
Biswas*<http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/thereporters/soutikbiswas/soutik_biswas/>
| 13:40 UK time, Thursday, 3 December 2009

*
*

*Twenty five years and several thousand dead and disabled men, women and
children later, answers to most of the thorny questions about the
world's* *most
horrific industrial
tragedy*<http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/december/3/newsid_2698000/2698709.stm>
* are still blowing in the wind in Bhopal. *


 Why has the compensation to the victims been so paltry? Why is there a
thick fog over the extent of contamination of groundwater in the Union
Carbide factory neighbourhood? Caught between *NGOs and a secretive Big
Government* <http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/8388355.stm>,
nobody is quite sure what is happening.


 And above all, many ask why those responsible have been allowed to go free?
After all, they say, money - whatever the amount - cannot compensate for a
crime of such magnitude, whether committed because of negligence or
sabotage. If this happened in the West, campaigners say, the company would
have been held to account, perhaps driven to bankruptcy by compensation
claims. But since this is India and the poor are dispensable, justice in
Bhopal has been a*
travesty.*<http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/8386710.stm>

Also what about the blot to Bhopal's image and its inglorious reputation as
a 'gassed' dystopia? Locals say the city lost its innocence after the
tragedy. "Life in Bhopal had been laid back and gentle. But the gas tragedy
changed all that. Nowadays everybody whinges, that's all that they do," says
Raj Kumar Keswani, the city's best-known journalist. "Also, the tragedy
divided the people. In a strange way, people who got compensation are often
reviled by people who didn't."

Mr Keswani should know. He has lived all of his 59 years in Bhopal and was
the only journalist who cried himself hoarse for two years before the
tragedy, saying the Union Carbide plant had lax safety procedures and that
the city was* "sitting on a volcano".* He had written a series of articles
on the doomed plant, petitioned the courts and worked the politicians.
Nobody listened to him.


 After the tragedy he challenged the government, accusing it of a sell-out
to Union Carbide -* the Indian government sued the company for $3bn but
settled for 15% of the amount* - and Mr Keswani became a mythic hero of
sorts:** *Dominique Lapierre*<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominique_Lapierre>
*, for example, mentioned him in great detail without once talking to
him* while
writing another
*best-seller*<http://www.amazon.com/Five-Past-Midnight-Bhopal-Industrial/dp/0446530883>.
"He wrote that I used to go around in a car with a bagful of CDs because I
was a music lover. Those days, as a struggling journalist, I had an old
scooter and CDs hadn't even come to India," Mr Keswani laughs. This is one
of my favourite Bhopal stories - it tells you how fact and fiction blur in
the chaos of India.

The gas tragedy, in a perverse way, actually ended up oiling parts of the
grassroots economy of Bhopal. As thousands of dollars of still inadequate
compensation money poured in, this sleepy city was transformed, say its
residents. Bhopal never had an economy of its own to speak of apart from one
state-owned behemoth; the city of Indore to its west was always the
commercial hub. Also, Bhopal belongs to one of India's most backward states
-* Madhya Pradesh - with human development indicators comparable to
sub-Saharan Africa.*

Twenty-five years later, Bhopal is a mini boom town, largely a result of
India opening up its economy and partly because of the money that flowed in
after the tragedy. It got some decent new hospitals, property grew and the
city became the headquarters of a powerful vernacular media group which also
publishes Harry Potter in Hindi. New malls are coming up and dozens of new
private colleges - most of which are now suffering from lack of students -
have opened up. Finally, Bhopal appears to giving its bustling cousin Indore
a run for its money


 Today, a* street-smart, English-speaking social activist and darling of the
international media* and a street-fighting, hardboiled activist *help the
victims*<http://www.openthemagazine.com/article/voices/bhopal-the-other-story>,
in their own way, to live and fight for compensation. Maimed by gas,
Bhopal's lost generation struggles to survive and to make sense of what is
happening around them -* pictures of children whose futures have been
snuffed out by the gas make one's blood boil and leave a feeling of numbness
and helplessness.*

An anniversary like Bhopal's should be a solemn time to remember the dead
and pledge to help the living dead, not become circuses of the kind they
have become today. 1984 was India's annus horribilis - the army
stormed the Golden
Temple, Mrs Gandhi was assassinated, Sikhs were massacred in revenge - but,
in hindsight, Bhopal must count as the greatest tragedy of them all.


 The story of Bhopal, as Mr Keswani says, is a story of a proud city and its
* people cheated and betrayed by a country and the world.* For India, it is
a collective shame and a disturbing reminder that its poor don't matter.
Most of the time anyway.
*http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/thereporters/soutikbiswas/*<http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/thereporters/soutikbiswas/>

Thanks & Regards,
*

Sudhir Srinivasan
*B.Arch, Dip.ID, Dip.CAD, Dip.PM, AIIA, IIID, ARIAI
*|**** Architect**** |*****

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