[NewPacifica] Re: [EF!] Bhopal Survivors Protest ON AIR NOW



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Date sent:              Fri, 03 Mar 2006 06:20:54 -0800
Subject:                [EF!] Bhopal Survivors Protest Bush Visit
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Completely ignored, of course, by the mainstream media, who are
completely focused on the "war on terror". The thousands who were 
killed, crippled or blinded from deadly chemicals in Bhopal suffered 
no less than the thousands of Kurds who died from Saddam's deadly 
chemicals in Jalabja. Deliberate indifference on the part of Union Carbide
destroyed as many lives as deliberate use of chemical weapons by 
Saddam Hussein. So, how about a war on "corporate terror"? 

Craig Gingold

++++++++++++++++++++++
 
 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
 MARCH 1, 2006
 4:15 PM

                           CONTACT: The International Campaign for Justice in 
Bhopal
                           http://www.bhopal.net/index1.html
                           http://bhopal.aidindia.org/blog
                           www.studentsforbhopal.org

                           US: Diana Ruiz 415-999-9074 (PT-Cell)
                           Carolyn Oppenheim, 413-584-9642 (ET)
                           India: Madhumita Dutta, + 91 (11)
                           26105472/41652451-52 (office), mdutta@xxxxxxxx
                           Nishant Jain, + 91 (11) 9811764745 

  
   Bush's India Trip Touches Nerve on US Business Human Rights Record

Bush burned in effigy in Bhopal, Survivors March on Delhi, Protest Dow 
Expansion in India 

March 1 - While some in the Indian business community hope for expanded trade 
from the 
Bush visit, ?another India? is protesting expanded US business until past human 
rights 
violations are resolved. Anti-Bush events lampoon the American President around 
the 
country and Bush was burned in effigy in one state capital - Bhopal. Anger 
about 
practices of US corporations including Coca Cola and Dow Chemical Company are 
feeding the fire.  

Survivors of the 1984 Bhopal Chemical Disaster are a week into a month-long 
March to 
New Delhi, to demand the Indian government stop US-based Dow Chemical?s 
expansion 
in India until it faces charges of culpable homicide for the disaster. Already 
pressure 
from the survivors blocked a deal between Indian Oil and Dow. Survivors want 
Dow to stop 
aggressively marketing its neurotoxic pesticide Dursban in India, which is 
banned for 
home use in the US after the severe poisoning of several children. The 
survivors are also 
demanding clean water and medical care from the Indian Government after 21 
years of 
death and pollution caused by Dow Chemical?s current subsidiary Union Carbide.  


The Bush administration thwarted efforts to extradite former Union Carbide CEO 
Warren 
Anderson to India to face trial. Freedom of Information documents indicate 
possible 
collusion between lawyers for Union Carbide and the US State Dept. The 
Survivors 
meanwhile march on, having gained support from 18 members of Congress headed by 
Rep. Frank Pallone in the past few years, along with city councils in Seattle 
and San 
Francisco. Civil cases for clean up of the contaminated plant site are pending 
in US 
and Indian Courts.  

As Bush visits with students in Hyderabad, other Indian students will be 
supporting the 
Bhopal March. Coca Cola?s poisoning of rural water supplies, as well as high 
pesticide 
levels in its product, has generated campus boycotts of Coke in the US and 
India. These 
actions serve as a warning for business expansion in India that does not take 
in basic 
human rights in its calculations.  

An Amnesty International report that used Bhopal as a case study, calls for 
International 
Human Rights Norms for Business. US-controlled Union Carbide built a poorly 
designed 
pesticide plant that poisoned local water - killing animals, driving reporters 
to warn of 
catastrophe, and causing workers to quit in droves in the 1980s. An estimated 
8,000 
people died almost overnight on December 3rd, 1984 when a toxic gas leak swept 
from 
the plant into the city. Today over 100,000 people are permanently disabled. Of 
a half 
million survivors, 10-15 still die monthly from the disaster?s effects and the 
poisoned 
water, ~22,000 have died in total. Union Carbide abandoned the site and paid a 
meagre 
settlement averaging ~$300-500 per person. Carbide has been declared a 
?fugitive from 
justice? by Indian Courts; the company?s current owner Dow Chemical refuses to 
face 
the charges.  

Some Indians fear repeating with the US, the history of corporate colonialism 
that began 
with the East India Company consuming India for the British Empire. The rush of 
US 
investment, profiting from India?s cheap, skilled labor has often resulted in 
pollution, 
worker death and in the most tragic case, the Bhopal Chemical Disaster of 1984. 
 

 
ATTENTION JOURNALISTS: To arrange interviews with Bhopal marchers contact 
Madhumita Dutta or Nishant Jain and for US based support groups contact Diana 
Ruiz. 
Video footage of the march available upon request. 



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