| From
Tehelka Magazine, Vol 7, Issue 25, Dated June 26, 2010 |
|
| CURRENT
AFFAIRS |
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cover story |
|
For A Few Pieces Of Silver
AS NEW SKELETONS FALL OUT OF THE OLD BHOPAL GAS TRAGEDY,
SHOMA CHAUDHURY AND SHANTANU GUHA RAY TRACK HOW JUSTICE IS
STILL BEING SUBVERTED TO PROTECT THE “INVESTMENT CLIMATE” IN INDIA
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THE UNBORN Jars containing deformed foetuses preserved from the 1984 Bhopal gas disaster at the forensic department of Gandhi Medical College in Bhopal
Photo: AP |
SOMETIMES THE breaking
news is not as important
as the old record. In a
small, box-shaped room
in the shanty colony of JP
Nagar in Bhopal, Leelabai,
a tiny sparrow of a woman, sits
crying. She doesn’t care about Warren
Anderson. She lost her ailing 27-year-old
daughter a month earlier to an undiagnosed disease. Her frail 23-year-old son
looks like he’s 14 and her one-year-old
grandson is lying on the floor sucking at
a pacifier. Her husband is a day labourer.
“It would have been better if my children
had died right then. We bring them up
with so much difficulty, it’s worse to lose
them at this age. And what’s the point of
having all these hospitals in our name if
they can’t even diagnose why we are dying. They might as well shut the hospitals
and let us die in our homes.”
Leelabai is just one of lakhs of people
across three generations who’ve been
destroyed by the evil white cloud that
floated out of the Union Carbide factory
in 1984. Hazrat Bi, who sits next to her,
had left her sleeping four-year-old son
behind in the rush to escape that night.
By the time she raced back to find him, he was unconscious. Although he survived,
he grew up to have a deformed
child. Such stories replicate endlessly
through the colony. Survivors suffering
from breathlessness, failing eyesight,
painful stomachs, missing limbs, angry
skins. Children of exposed parents born
with incapacities of varying degrees.
In far-away Delhi, Brigadier Jitender
Pal Sud, another survivor, sits in a wheelchair
completely paralysed. “The gas did
not kill me in one clean stroke. Its grip on
my body has increased over the years; it’s
eating away at me gradually.” But it is
pointless to talk of the suffering of these
people because, as it turns out, it seems the real story of Bhopal 1984 is not the
devastation it brought. Or the legitimate
search that should’ve been undertaken to
ensure such a thing never happens again.
The real story of Bhopal is the
perceived impact it had on India’s “investment
climate” and the distorted, ways in which successive Indian governments
have worked to manage that.
SOMETIMES THE breaking news
makes little sense without the
old record.
Over the last week — ever since a
Bhopal trial court read out its verdict on
the criminal case against Union Carbide functionaries on June 7 — there has
been a series of shocking confessions.
Twenty five thousand people dead, 5
lakh affected and the accused only get
two years in jail and bail on a bond of Rs
25,000? This was too little justice to
stomach for the world’s worst industrial
disaster. The verdict seemed to unlock a
sleeping consciousness. Outrage spilled
across the country. Key people, silent for
too long, began to speak up. Old facts
tumbled into the media: how Warren
Anderson, the CEO of Union Carbide
USA and now chief absconder, had been
flown into Bhopal on December 7, 1984,
arrested ceremoniously at the airport, taken to the Union Carbide guest house,
given tea, then on the orders of then
Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Arjun
Singh, put on a State aircraft back to
Delhi and out of India to safety.
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| CRIES AND WHISPERS While Anderson has aged 'gracefully' in his hideaway, the victims of his criminal neglect struggle for breath Photo: AP |
| The real and dark truth
about Bhopal is that the
release of Warren Anderson
was not an isolated event |
Captain RS Sodhi, director of aviation
in Bhopal at the time, has spoken of how
he was ordered by the chief minister’s office
to arrange Anderson’s departure.
Captain SH Ali, the pilot who flew the
plane, has spoken of how District Collector
Moti Singh and Superintendent of Police
Swaraj Puri escorted Anderson and
waved as he flew off. (Moti Singh has said
he acted on the instruction of the state
chief secretary; and there is no word from
Puri but there’s video footage of him waving).
In addition, Arun Nehru, former
commerce minister and once a close Rajiv
Gandhi confidant and strategist, has said
that once Anderson reached Delhi, he
met President Giani Zail Singh and Home
Minister PV Narasimha Rao like some
visiting dignitary before flying out to
safety. And BR Lall, a CBI officer and principal
investigator in the Bhopal case till
1995, has said the CBI was instructed by
the Ministry of External Affairs not to
pursue the extradition of Anderson.
These disturbing admissions have led
to two things over the last week: a renewed
clamour for extraditing Anderson,
who is now 90 years old; and a
conjecture game about whether it was
Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi who directed
Anderson be let off. In a sense,
both concerns are dangerously shortsighted.
The extradition of Warren Anderson
is certainly warranted (though
unlikely) and would be symbolically satisfying.
But what will Leelabai and the
generations that come after her gain by
merely nailing a 90-year old man?
Equally, as Arun Nehru says, it is surely
an inescapable fact that Rajiv Gandhi not
only knew but had sanctioned Anderson’s
flight out of India. But to pin it at
that would be to relegate the travesty of Bhopal merely to a past mistake, committed
by an earlier government.
The real truth about Bhopal
is that these recent revelations are not
isolated events but part of a continuing
story whose outcome will have farreaching
implications for our collective
life as a nation. Talking about Rajiv
Gandhi’s culpability in letting Anderson
go, Arun Nehru said something that
seems to have escaped majority attention.
To paraphrase loosely he said, it might be
wrong to judge events in the 1980s with
the perspective of India in 2010.
India was poor and it was very difficult
to get money invested into the country.
Punishing Anderson would have sent
out a bad signal to the US business. (A
declassified CIA note reiterates this view.)
Disturbing as this may be, it is plausible that Anderson was let off in 1984 not out
of individual corruption but a misguided
attempt to boost investor confidence in
India — “under American pressure”, as
senior Congress leader Digvijay Singh
puts it. The trouble is, the Indian government’s
‘leniency’ did not stop there. Nothing
has changed in India 2010. A cluster
of official letters from 2006 to
as recently as 2008, accessed through RTI,
shows that what was done for Union Carbide
in 1984, and after, is still being done
for its successor company Dow Chemical
today. These letters show some
of the most powerful men in government
and industry, from Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh to P Chidambaram (then Finance
Minister), Kamal Nath (then
Commerce and Industry minister), Ronen
Sen (then Indian Ambassador to the US) Montek Singh Ahluwalia, Deputy
Chairman, Planning Commission, Abhishek
Singhvi, Congress spokesperson
and Ratan Tata, among others, consulting
each other on the best way to allow Dow
Chemical to evade liability in paying for
the remediation (or clean-up) of the toxic
contamination in Bhopal.
Their rationale — referred to again
and again in the letters — is still the
same: how to enhance “India’s investment
climate”. According to these letters,
at a meeting of the US-India CEO Forum,
Andrew Liveris, CEO of Dow Chemical,
pledged that he would invest Rs 1,000
crore in India if the government would
whisk away all the uncomfortable “legacy
issues in Bhopal” arising out of Dow buying
Union Carbide in 2001. The Indian
government is not only willing to fall
over backwards to do this, it is willing to
subvert the cause of justice in Bhopal.
Willing to set a bad precedent which will
impact India for generations to come.
Even as this travesty unfolds — driven
by the same logic of wooing investors —
the government is simultaneously pushing
for a dangerous Nuclear Civil Liability
Bill that excuses foreign suppliers from all criminal liability and seeks to
cap their maximum financial liability at
Rs 500 crore in the event of a nuclear
disaster. (The rest to be borne by the Indian
taxpayer.) It further states that potential
victims will have no right to take
foreign suppliers to court and only the
Indian operator — Nuclear Power Corporation
of India Ltd (NPCIL) — can sue
the suppliers if it so wishes. It allows victims
only 10 years within which to make
claims (ruling out corporate liability for
long-term or multi-generation health
impacts). And it deems that all nucleardisaster
related litigation will be outside
the purview of ordinary Indian courts:
claims and civil cases will only be entertained
in a Nuclear Damages Commission.
A sort of single window to justice
(and, therefore, also easier to “manage”).
| Ratan Tata’s offer to pay for
the toxic waste clean-up
tried to turn legal liability
into an act of private grace |
To understand the staggering — almost
tectonic — significance of all this,
one has to go back to the beginning. To
the ugly story of how India was made to
sell itself — body and soul — to protect
foreign investment.
SATINATH SARANGI sits laughing
helplessly in a coffee shop in
Delhi, a few days after the criminal
case verdict. He had first gone to
Bhopal from Banaras Hindu University
as a relief volunteer in 1984. He never returned
and has been one of Bhopal’s key
campaigners for 26 years. With every
story he tells, he laughs. The magnitude
of betrayals is so huge, there can be no
other response. Rashida Bi, however,
asks if it would have been better if they had picked up the gun.
| CAT HAS NINE LIVES |
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Then PM Rajiv Gandhi with the then CM of Madhya Pradesh, Arjun Singh
Photo: INDIAN EXPRESS ARCHIVE |
Andrew Liveris, the current CEO of Dow Chemica Photo: AFP |
P Chidambaram, Union Home Minister
Photo: SHAILENDRA PANDEY |
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Montek Singh Ahluwalia, Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission
Photo:
SALMAN USMANI |
Arun Jaitley (BJP), the leader of the opposition in the Rajya Sabha
Photo: SHAILENDRA PANDEY |
Ratan Tata, industrialist
Photo: SHAILENDRA PANDEY |
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Warren Anderson, former CEO, Union Carbide
Photo: AP |
Abhishek Manu Singhvi, Congress spokesperson
Photo: SHAILENDRA PANDEY
|
Kamal Nath, Union Minister of Road Transport and Highways
Photo: SHAILENDRA PANDEY |
Mapping the complicated story of the
Bhopal gas disaster is like walking into an
eerie, multi-chambered hall of horrors.
One chamber holds the story of the disaster,
the devastations it brought, the compensation
given, the dilutions that were
engineered. A second chamber holds the
story of another separate and ongoing disaster:
Union Carbide’s toxic waste both on
the factory premises and in the three solar
evaporation ponds where it used to dump
this waste — a contamination which predates
the night of December 3 and which
is still poisoning the communities around.
A third chamber holds the tortuous legal
story and the subversion of justice that led
to last week’s outrage. Other chambers
hold stories about corrupt pollution
boards; aborted medical surveys; a thousand
unkept promises.
But, in a sense, the second chamber
has the most far-reaching consequences
for India. It is the chamber of legacies. It
asks: who is liable for the environmental
mess created by an industrial company?
Who will be responsible for the dangerous
health impacts of its negligence?
How strongly will India monitor and
bring cavalier corporate behaviour to
book? Or to use former Boston Consultancy
head Arun Maira’s more succinct
terms: “Whose ass will you kick when
things go wrong? Where does the buck
stop?” How we deal with these questions
in the Bhopal gas tragedy case will determine
how such industries do business
in India in the future.
The urgent story of Dow Chemical and the current Indian government
involves this second chamber.
The Union Carbide factory in Bhopal
sprawls over a 100 acres. All along its
edges are teeming, shanty colonies — no
mandatory buffers between poison and
people. (According to
TEHELKA’s sources, the reason the lethal
Union Carbide factory came to Bhopal
in the first place in 1975 is because the
then Industries Minister Shankar Dayal
Sharma, who later became the President
of India, insisted it be set up in his constituency
rather than the more deserted
Jagdalpur, where it was intended. RK
Sahi, who was then Deputy Director in
the ministry, confirmed this when he
told The Hindu that the entire department
was against granting the industrial
licence. “We knew that discarded technologies
were being transferred to India.
It was obsolete in the US, but it was
being dumped in our country. We all
knew that,” he said. “These things were
finally decided at a high level. There was
a lot of talk of political interference in
those days. Union Carbide had been
trying for a licence since 1970. They
only got it during the Emergency, which
was not a democratic government. So,
whatever somebody wanted to do, he or
she did it then.”)
For two decades after the disaster, the
abandoned factory remained as it was —
untended. Its lethal waste — capable of
causing cancer, physical and mental retardation,
headaches, dizziness, skin afflictions
and worse — seeped dangerously
into the soil and underground water.
Above ground, many of the pipes and
tanks began to corrode with time and spill
their hazardous content. Several toxicity
studies were done — including a damaging
one by Union Carbide itself in 1989,
where the samples resulted in 100 percent
morbidity in fish within 24 hours. There
are other company memos from 1977 and
1982 — predating the apocalyptic night in 1984 — which speak of leakages and toxic
seepage into sub-soil water sources. However,
these were never made public and no
initiative was undertaken to remediate the
site. (A major reason for the delay in responding
to the hazardous waste in the
factory premises after the disaster was the
part played by NEERI, a government scientific
agency, in downplaying the risk assessment.
Again, there are Union Carbide
internal memos that talk of how the company
decided to fund NEERI’s research so
that it would give the company an “opportunity
to participate and put forward
our views during the progress of the study
and try to protect the company’s interest.”)
| The continuing tragedy of
Bhopal is the official push
for a corporate utopia of ‘all-rights-and-no-duties’ |
Faced with this adamant corporation,
refusing its ethical and legal duty to clean
up its toxic site, some Bhopal campaigners
filed a case in a US court. Finally, in
2004, a local activist Aloke Pratap Singh
filed a PIL in the Madhya Pradesh High
Court urging the immediate remediation
of the site and requesting that Dow
Chemicals be held liable for it. In May
2005, the Ministry of Chemical (then
under Ram Vilas Paswan) petitioned the
court to direct Dow to deposit Rs 100
crore in advance for remediation. In the
five years since then, this petition has
remained the only tiny wedge that has
stopped Dow — and through it Union
Carbide — from getting away scot-free.
In all the official letters accessed
through RTI , this googly from the Ministry
of Chemicals comes up for repeated mention.
Disturbingly, it is corporate patriarch
and Co-Chairman of the influential US-India CEO Forum, Ratan Tata who first
suggests to then Finance Minister P Chidambaram
in July 2006 that the remediation
of the site should be taken over “in
national interest” by “responsible Indian
corporates in the private and public sector”
as delays in the litigation “could cause
illness and even death to people other
than those affected by the old Bhopal
tragedy.” However, far from being merely a
humanitarian act of conscience undertaken
by Indian corporates as an interim
measure while the courts pin down the
corporation actually responsible for the
mess, Mr Tata’s offer comes with strings
attached. In a November 2006 letter to
Montek Singh Ahluwalia, he mentions a
letter written by Dow CEO Andrew Liveris
to Ambassador Ronen Sen in which Liveris specifically asks that the Ministry of
Chemicals withdraw their wedge in the
door: the application for Rs 100 crore as
an interim deposit. Tata writes, “Obviously
this is a key aspect because the application
implies that the Government of
India views Dow as ‘liable’ in the Bhopal
Gas Disaster case”. His offer to set up a private
remediation fund still stands, he says,
if the deadlock can be broken. Yet, he goes
on to say, “I also understand the High
Court hearing continues the fairly positive
process wherein the court is focussing on
the remediation of the site while reiterating
their earlier order that the government
of India and the government of MP should
bear the cost of remediation equally”! (Our
italics; our exclamation of dismay.)
This one letter from Andrew Liveris
was sufficient to trigger a frantic carousel
of consultations between ministers. Both
Chidambaram and Kamal Nath strongly
urge that Tata’s offer be taken up and
Dow be let off the hook — to bolster investor
confidence. The Prime Minister’s
principal secretary, TKA Nair even suggests
to Dow that they approach Congress
spokesperson Abhishek Singhvi
“for guidance.” (Singhvi goes on to become
counsel for Dow in t he toxic waste
case and is currently arguing influentially
in court on why Dow is not liable. “This is
what a glorious party led by lawyers like
Nehru and Gandhi has come to,” says the
PIL litigant, Aloke Pratap Singh.) However,
despite this high pressure lobbying,
the Ministry of Chemicals doggedly
refuses to withdraw its wedge.
One might ask, what was wrong with
Tata’s offer? The answer is simple. Like
most civilised countries, India follows a
common legal principle: the polluter
pays. Through his offer, both Tata, Dow
and the Indian government were seeking
to turn what should be a non-negotiable
ethical and moral duty — and legal liability
— for any polluting industry into an
act of personal magnanimity. If this had gone through as a precedent, victims of
industrial disasters in India would have
been reduced to seeking remediation as a
voluntary (and unreliable) act of grace
rather than their legal right. In fact, in the
same breath that he offers to set up a
fund, in his letter to Montek Singh, ironically,
Tata also refers to the “positive
process” in court which would lead to the
government of India and government of
Madhya Pradesh paying for the remediation
of UCC — and thereby Dow’s — toxic
waste. So the eventual buck was to be
passed not even to
industrialists like him but the ordinary
Indian taxpayer.
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| CSR INACTION Some of the worst international industrial disasters. From left, Exxon Valdez supertanker oil spill off the coast of Alaska, USA in 1989; Chernobyl nuclear plant meltdown in Ukrain, 1986; BP oil rig spill in the Gulf of Mexico, off the coast of Louisiana Photos: REUTERS |
The disturbing thing is, the corporate
utopia of ‘all-rights-and-no duties’ that is
currently being pursued through sleight of
hand will become the legal position if the
Nuclear Civil Liability Bill goes through.
Indians will become disenfranchised.
Attempts to reach Abhishek Singhvi
and Home Minister Chidambaram for
their rationale led nowhere. Singhvi
was out of the country; Chidambaram
responded with, “Sorry, I have nothing
to share.”
| Andrew Liveris’ letter had
the government in a tizzy.
The Bhopal victims’ walk to
Delhi achieved nothing |
MANAGEMENT GURU and former
Procter and Gamble head, Gurcharan
Das has recently written
a book on the “Dharma of Capitalism”: he
understands the moral tightrope of engendering
a friendly “investment climate”
in India. “I sympathise with what you are
saying. You are right about the difference
between legal liability and private magnanimity,
but I would not be too harsh on
people like Chidambaram and Kamal
Nath. The investment community is still
very hostile to India. I am just back from
New York and it was humiliating to hear
investors’ views on India and how corrupt it is. China is way ahead of us as a
preferred destination. We have a lot of
catching up to do.”
Unfortunately, this seems a fallacious
argument. Few would oppose the transformation
of India into a less corrupt society:
the opposition is to a government
that is willing to sacrifice the interests of
its own citizens, violate the principles of
natural justice — and even subvert the
law of the land — merely to sweeten the
climate for foreign investors. The real
question facing the country then is: on
what terms should we accept business?
How can we ensure that a corporate
entity also behaves like a good citizen?
“It all depends on how strong a country
is,” says a reputed IT industrialist, who
does not wish to be named. He’s right.
Dow’s position in India is that it is not
liable for any of Union Carbide’s legacy
issues. In the US though, in a 2003 shareholder
statement, it voluntarily looked
into “asbestos issues associated with
Union Carbide’s former business activities”
and not only held itself liable but put
aside $2.2 billion as “potential cost of resolving pending and future claims against
Carbide.” As a result of this assessment,
the statement says, “Carbide — and consequently Dow —took a pretax charge to
earnings of $828 million in the fourth quarter of 2002” (our italics).
“Carbide — and consequently Dow”:
that is the evident (and self-confessed)
relationship Bhopal campaigners are trying
to insist on in their search for justice.
But the weight of almost the entire political
establishment is against them. The
BJP may be shouting hoarse about the
Congress’ culpability in letting Anderson
off, but its own senior MP, Arun Jaitley
has written a detailed note on why Dow
should not be made liable for the remediation
cost in Bhopal. (A copy of this is
with TEHELKA). To understand the legal
sleight of hand — “corporate veil” — that
both Dow and the Indian government
are using to defend this position, one has
step into the third chamber of horrors
and go back to the shameful ways in
which earlier Indian governments allowed
Union Carbide to evade its liability
in the first place. The protection of
Dow now is in a continuum with the abject
protection extended to Carbide then.
This is the story of how Carbide got
away.
The Bhopal pesticide plant was
owned by Union Carbide India Limited
(UCIL), in which Union Carbide USA
(UCC) had a majority 50.9 percent shares.
The plant was however designed by UCC
and most of its day-to-day running was closely monitored by it. After the fateful
night of December 3, a case was filed in
the district court in Bhopal against UCC,
UCIL and other sister companies. Under
the Bhopal Act of 1985, the government
made itself the sole litigant on behalf of
the victims and initially sued Union Carbide
for $3.3 billion in damages. However,
when the litigation promised to go
on for years, the chief magistrate directed
UCC to pay Rs 350 crore as an interim fund. UCC appealed against this in
the MP High Court and the judge there
reduced the sum to Rs 270 crore. The Indian
government cross-appealed at the
Supreme Court and in 1989 Justice RS
Pathak directed an out-of-court settlement
between the government and UCC.
This settlement itself was a terrible
travesty. The amount agreed on was $470
million — barely 15 percent of what was
first claimed. The key consideration was not how much Bhopal’s victims needed,
but how much UCC had set aside as insurance.
What was infinitely — infinitely
— worse was that as part of the settlement
package, the government agreed to
quash every other civil and criminal liability
against UCC in perpetuity. “We ransacked
the Union Carbide office in
Delhi,” says Satinath. “We were so angry,
when we couldn’t find anything else, we
tore their telephone directories.”
The national uproar forced the issue
back in the courts and though the
Supreme Court upheld the settlement
twice, in 1991, it was forced to re-allow
criminal proceedings against UCC and
UCIL. UCC, however, failed to appear before
the court and the chief magistrate attached
all its properties in 1992. Shamefully
(and infamously), Chief Justice AM
Ahmadi overturned the magistrates’ decision
in 1994 and allowed UCC to sell its shares in UCIL — on the condition that the
proceeds would go towards a Bhopal Memorial
Hospital Trust. The Khaitan
Group, owner of McLeod Russell — makers
of Eveready batteries — bought UCIL.
In 1996, Ahmadi extended further inexplicable
courtesies and diluted the criminal
charges against UCC and its web of
companies from “culpable homicide not
mounting to murder” (304-II of IPC) to
“causing death by negligence” (304 A of
IPC). Very soon after — in a visible and degrading
conflict of interest— he became
the chairman of the Rs 400 crore Hospital
Trust he had helped create.
| US agencies hauled up Dow
for paying $200,000 in
bribes to Indian officials;
India did absoutely nothing |
“I have never seen such a draconian
and undemocratic Trust,” says Aloke
Pratap Singh. “No one can ask any questions.
The Trust will pass from him to his
heirs and they have no liabilities if there
are any losses.” Interestingly, the Trust is
also co-chaired by the son of Sir Ian Percival,
who is a lawyer with a firm retained
by UCC. Leelabai was right not to be concerned
about Warren Anderson: she understands
that she doesn’t have the voice
that will control his destiny. “We, the
people,” may have given ourselves the
Constitution, but though both Leelabai
and Hazra Bi walked 800 kilometres from
Bhopal to Delhi — once in 2006 and
again in 2008 — seeking an appointment
with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh,
hoping for justice, they could not set off
a flurry of consultative letters in the ministries.
How could they: those were the
exact years letters were flying fast and
thick to attend to Andrew Liveris.
“The government didn’t falter, it’s the
Chief Justice who decided to charge the
accused under a section meant for car accidents.
It’s unfortunate since man-made
disasters can’t be treated as accidents,”
Law Minister Moily tells TEHELKA over a
brief phone conversation from Bengaluru.
Counsel for Bhopal victims, Karuna
Nundy says they are going to file a curative
petition and re-open the criminal case. Sources also say Moily is now putting
pressure on Ahmadi to quit the Trust.
But the truth is, nothing Ahmadi did was
without the government’s knowledge —
or sanction. Or else, why did they not appeal
against his decision all these years?
SO HOWabjectly far is India willing
to stretch to create a conducive
investment climate? Is it willing
to brave another industrial disaster?
It would seem so. In the unseemly
hurry to please Dow Chemical, a special
Technical Committee under a government Task Force, directed 40 metric
tonnes of the lethal waste from the
Bhopal factory to be disposed of in an
incinerator and storage facility at Pithampur,
near Indore, run by Ramky Enviro
Engineers Ltd. The culpable
inefficiencies of Ramky and its Pithampur
facility are an epic chamber of horror
in themselves: akin to a mere shift in
location of crime. No one in government
seems concerned, for instance, that the
Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB)
has made several adverse remarks during
its inspections about leaking drums,
spillages, unscientific evaporation ponds
and the general shoddiness of the Pithampur
facility. Or that Tarapur village
is right next door. Or that when the
court ordered that surface hazardous
material at the Bhopal factory should be
packed and put away somewhere safe,
Ramky cavalierly hired some local
labourers and got barefooted men and
women, with accompanying children, to
handle and sweep all the waste — without
even the charade of protective gear.
No one in government seems to be embarrassed, either, about the fact that
around the time Indian ministers were
writing to each other with awe about
Dow’s potential investments in India,
Dow was being penalised by the US Securities
and Exchange Commission, under
the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, for
paying $200,000 in bribes to Indian officials
to fast-track the registration of their
controversial pesticide Dursban (which it
sells for residential use in India though it is
banned everywhere else). Dow meekly
paid $325,000 as civil penalty to the American SEC, while India did nothing.
What’s extremely disturbing is that
around this time, in fact, the Maharashtra
government was working overtime to
clear a controversial Dow Chemical research
project in Chakan, near Pune,
which — according to The Economic
Times but not independently corroborated
by TEHELKA — had been rejected
both in the US and Europe for safety and
toxicity concerns. Far from putting it
through stringent examination, however,
Indian officials noted on Dow’s October
2006 application: “This is a prestigious project. Just get it examined from pollution
point of view and put it up in seven
days.” Four lakh square metres of land is
given to Dow very soon after and permission
for a chemical manufacturing
unit is granted on flimsy paperwork.
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| PRESIDENTIAL EDICT US President Barack Obama visits the site of the recent oil spill. He has announced strict punitive measures; but on Bhopal, he is strangely tight-lipped |
As word spread, local people and
campaigners flowed into Chakan to
protest. The buildings under construction
were vandalised. Andrew Liveris
wrote another spate of letters to Chidambaram
and Kamal Nath in October
2008 with aggressive directives: if the
state government wanted to review the
project, he argued illogically, construction
work at the site must be allowed to
proceed simultaneously. “The potential
implications of these costly disruptions”
would prove to be “potentially devastating
examples of lack of support for
foreign investors,” he threatened. “The
government must speak with one voice”,
he advised. And ended with the barely veiled order: “We look for tangible evidence
of government action in the next
30 days.” Hardly the tone one would expect
from a mere corporation to the sovereign
Republic of India. Still, the
ministers did what they could. Poised on
the verge of a joint venture with a chemical
company called GACL in Gujarat, Liveris
had, yet again, wanted the Ministry
of Chemicals to withdraw its Rs 100
crore wedge in the door. The PMO referred
the Dow request to the Law
Ministry to see what could be done.
Hearteningly, like the Ministry of
Chemicals, the Law Ministry refused to
cave in. It observed that “irrespective of
the manner in which UCC has merged or
has been acquired by Dow Chemical, if
there is any legal liability, it would have
to be borne by Dow Chemical…” It went
on to add it could not assure that the
new investment proposed by Dow
Chemical would be “immune from the
orders of the Court”.
Dow might deem this bad investment
support strategy, but India’s citizens
would say the Law Ministry was merely
doing its job. Self-confidently inviting
industry to live and work and profit
within the laws of the land.
THERE IS a common axiom among
corporations: the business of business
is business. This idea allows
companies to make money under any circumstances:
it creates, to quote Arun
Maira, “the legal fiction” that a corporate is a citizen yet somehow exists outside of society.
But India is proof that this legal fiction
cannot sustain itself in a mature
democracy. In recent years, as successive
Indian governments have shopped
for foreign investment, ironically, ordinary
Indian citizens have resisted with claw and
blood. Contrary to popular belief, this is
not because ordinary Indians are opposed
to industry but because they see that
business has accrued to itself the right to
practice unjustly: seizing land at will;
devastating environments; placing itself
out of scrutiny.
As national outrage over Bhopal swept
across the media, sources say Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh told close aides he
did not wish Bhopal to become an albatross
for the Congress the way the Babri
Masjid had become for the BJP. If this is
true, he might have to soar beyond strict
legalities into the loftier realm of ethics
and dharma. As this goes to press, US
President Barack Obama has got UKbased
energy major BP to commit $20 billion
toward cleaning its oil spill in the Gulf
of Mexico; and $100 million compensation
fund for oil industry workers left
jobless. India had asked UCC for only $3.3
billion: it came away with $470 million.
A few years ago, the Prime Minister
had famously declared Maoists as “the
greatest security threat to the nation” and
said the unrest in the heart of India was
spoiling the “investment climate of the
country.” Now, Rashida Bi is contemplating
the gun too — even if only as a joke.
If he really wants to preserve the
climate he cares for, then, he could issue
a new set of instructions to his group of
ministers, slated to meet on June 18:
send Bhopal’s toxic waste to safe and
reputed incinerators, where no fresh
community stands to be harmed. And
make Dow pay for the legacy of the
worst industrial disaster in the world.
With inputs from
Samrat Chakrabarti and Nishita Jha
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