On December 3, 1984, the Bhopal disaster occurred. A Union Carbide pesticide plant leaked 45 tons of methyl isocyanate and other toxic compounds in Bhopal, India, killing 2,259 (official figure) - other estimates as high as 16,000 (including later deaths) and over half a million injured. From the article:
"Bhopal Gas Tragedy Still Haunts India
Bhopal Gas Tragedy Still Haunts India
33 years after the Bhopal disaster, toxic waste at the site continues to ruin lives.
By Neeta Lal
April 19, 2017
For 33 years, around 336 tonnes of hazardous waste have been lying at the Union Carbide India Limited (UCIL) factory, the site of the infamous 1984 Bhopal gas tragedy. When Environment Minister Anil Madhav Dave announced in Parliament recently that the right wing Bhartiya Janata Party-led Indian government has not yet allotted any funds to dispose of the waste, it triggered vehement protests across the country.
The epic disaster took place in Bhopal, the capital city of the central state of Madhya Pradesh, on the night of December 2-3, 1984. Over 600,000 people were exposed to the accidental leakage of nearly 42 tonnes of the toxic gas methyl isocyanate (MIC) at the UCIL factory; an estimated 15,000 died. Innocent Indians lost their lives or faculties due to the negligence of the Texas-headquartered Union Carbide chemicals producing company, which got away with paying paltry compensation to the victims.
Given this context not only did the minister’s statement underscore the state’s nonchalance about an episode that brought international opprobrium on India, it also highlighted the continued neglect of a region where — 33 years on — kids are still being born with twisted limbs and other physical and mental deformities caused by their parents’ exposure to the gas.
Surveys, including one by Amnesty International, have highlighted how toxic material still lies in heaps at the factory while survivors are fighting a losing battle to have the site cleaned up. Studies have established that people are still dying due to the poisoning of groundwater from waste leeching into three ponds as well as several sites around the factory premises. The state’s insensitivity underscores an urgent need for a national policy to deal with contaminated sites.
In 2009, 25 years after the tragedy, the Delhi-based think tank Center for Science and Environment (CSE) conducted an independent assessment and found high levels of contamination in the soil and groundwater at the Union Carbide factory site and its adjoining areas.
A joint study by CSE and the Central Pollution Control Board in 2009 also found soil and groundwater to be contaminated with heavy metals and chemicals. A Beilstein test conducted in 2015 found the water from 240-foot-deep bore wells to be contaminated.
Politicians, meanwhile, are quibbling over how to address the problem. Says Rakina Khan, an activist with the Bhopal Gas Peedit Mahila Purush Sangharsh Morcha, “Politicians are squabbling over how to clean the site, what should be done with the waste, and who should pay for it even as the pollution continues to wreak havoc and engulf more areas. For us, the people of Bhopal, even three decades later, our nightmare hasn’t ended.”
Shashank Shekhar of the Department of Geology at Delhi University adds, “There has been very little attempt so far to conduct an assessment of the groundwater around the area to examine how deep the chemicals may have seeped and their impact on the current and future generations. Studies show that the rate of cancer among the victims is 10 times higher than in the normal population.”
The poisonous vapors, now deeply entrenched in the soil and groundwater after many years, are still killing people who are too poor to move elsewhere. “No consolidated record exists to show how many people are still suffering. As a result, even after the government paid the paltry compensation to more than half a million victims, fresh claims are still pouring in,” reports the CSE in a study on the impact of the toxic gases.
The world’s worst industrial disaster also remains a sharp lesson in the need for greater industrial safety regulations in Asia’s third-largest economy. Environmentalists assert that the Bhopal case should have been instructive for successive governments to put in place stricter environmental laws and mechanisms to govern hazardous waste and industries. Yet nothing of the sort happened. Worse, the paucity of effective safeguards continues to plague scores of hazardous industries across India, many of them in the unorganized sector.
Organizations fighting for justice for the Bhopal tragedy victims have repeatedly spotlighted the issue that generations born after the incident are also marked by the poisons that leaked from the pesticide factory.
The matter of paltry compensation continues to rile the victims. “Adequate compensation is important since the health of many victims has been so compromised that they can’t even walk. How can we move on without any rehabilitation measure?” asks Rashida Bee, an activist and victim. She explains that the ex gratia compensation of about $1,500 was given to only 33,672 survivors among the hundreds of thousands exposed to Union Carbide’s toxic gas. “The government petition still underestimates the number of victims and the compensation did not go to many who needed it,” she elaborates.
A major reason for the miscalculation, experts say, is that the figures of dead and injured were disputed. Activists and government agree the initial settlement was based on incorrect data. “About 93 percent of victims were left out of compensation,” says Rakesh Kumar, a volunteer from Bhopal Group for Information and Action, one of five activist groups leading the protests.
Does the fight to get enhanced compensation against UCIL — now overtaken by Dow Chemical — stand a chance? Many cases have been launched in India and the United States calling for Dow to pay compensation to survivors and to clean up the lingering environmental pollution, without success. The company argues it was not involved in the tragedy, having purchased UCC 17 years later. However, critics iterate that a successor company, in this case Dow Chemical, inherited both the assets and the liabilities of Union Carbide.
UCC’s CEO at the time of the disaster, Warren Anderson, died in September at the age of 92 as a fugitive in India, having never stood trial for criminal charges. But that hasn’t ended compensation claims. Fresh ones are being launched by those never counted as victims, including children with inherited health problems and those affected by drinking groundwater contaminated by pollution still leaking from the site.
Nearly three decades later, Bharti Upadhyaya, 45, is among thousands of survivors who say they suffer chronic health problems and have crippling medical bills. “My lungs continue to bother me even after so many years. I feel breathless even after walking a little. Despite expensive treatment, doctors say my lungs will never recover fully and I may die in the next few years.”
A refrain of loss and angst resonates in house after house in the lanes around the ruins of the old Union Carbide plant in Bhopal. The victims are demanding more compensation for all survivors and a correction of the death toll and the extent of injury in the curative petition.
In an annual ritual on the tragedy’s anniversary each year, thousands of victims across the country, as well as various NGOs representing those affected, hold rallies chanting slogans and burn effigies of Warren Anderson, the logos of the U.S. firm and its current owner Dow Chemical, and the flag of the United States.
Last year, the Madhya Pradesh government announced the construction of a Hiroshima-like memorial for the gas tragedy victims on the premises of the defunct factory. But will such tokenism really help anybody? Far more thoughtful would be to address the issue of toxic waste, and the continuing contamination of the UCIL surroundings, rehabilitation of the victims and more compensation for their sufferings. Until that is done, Bhopal’s hapless souls — whose worlds turned topsy-turvy that fateful night 33 years ago — will have no closure.
Neeta Lal is a Delhi-based editor and journalist. She was a nominee for the SOPA Awards 2014 and World Media Summit Awards 2014."
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