To:
The Dow Chemical Company
I support the struggle for justice of the people of Bhopal.
More than 20,000 innocent people have already died and 120,000
are suffering today from health effects (see www.bhopal.org)
related to their gas exposure. It was Union Carbide’s
cost-cutting that turned Bhopal into a gas chamber (see www.bhopal.net/oldsite/poisonpapers.html)
and it’s the responsibility of Carbide’s new owner,
Dow Chemical, to resolve the outstanding legal and moral obligations
it has in Bhopal (see www.studentsforbhopal.org/DowIsLiable.htm).
'Don't ask what these eyes have seen' |
I'M OUTRAGED THAT:
1. There
was no siren and no warning—people woke with the gases
already in their faces, filling their mouths, noses and lungs
with excruciating pain.
2. NONE of safety systems were functioning
on the night of the disaster—six in all.
3. Union Carbide under-invested in an inherently
hazardous facility located in a crowded neighborhood, used
admittedly unproven designs, stored lethal MIC in reckless
quantities, dismantled safety systems and cut down on safety
staff and training in an effort to cut costs.
4. Union Carbide and its new owner, Dow Chemical,
continue to blame the disaster on a fictitious and unnamed
worker, and deny their own negligence.
5. In the wake of the disaster, Carbide claimed
that the gas was harmless, when it knew it was lethal (as
described in its own manuals).
6. Dow-Carbide refuses to share all its medical
information about the health effects of the gas it released,
MIC—information that doctors could use to save lives—claiming
the information is a “trade secret”.
7. Union Carbide fled India and abandoned
its Bhopal plant, leaving thousands of tons of dangerous chemicals
behind, which are now poisoning the water of the same people
Carbide first poisoned more than 20 years ago. As more people
grow sick, Dow-Carbide still refuses to clean up its pollution
in Bhopal.
8. The Union Carbide Corporation, charged
criminally with “culpable homicide” in the wake
of the disaster, has refused to appear in court or stand trial.
Union Carbide is now an international fugitive from justice,
considered an “absconder” under Indian law.
Bhopal remains one of the world's worst examples of corporate
crime, but the people of Bhopal continue to persevere in their
call for justice. I’m joining Bhopal’s survivors
by calling on Dow to:
1. Face Trial: Ensure that
prime accused Warren Anderson, former chairman of Union Carbide
ceases absconding from criminal justice in India and the authorized
representatives of the company [Dow-Union Carbide] face trial
in the Bhopal criminal court.
2. Provide Long Term Health Care:
Assume responsibility for the continuing and long
term health consequences among the exposed persons and potentially
their future generations. This includes medical care, health
monitoring and necessary research studies. The company must
provide all information on the leaked gases and their medical
consequences.
3. Clean Up The Poison: Remove
the contamination of the ground water and soil in and around
the abandoned Union Carbide factory in Bhopal. Provide for
supply of safe drinking water to the community.
4. Provide Economic and Social Support:
Dow must provide income opportunities to victims
who can not pursue their usual trade as a result of exposure-induced
illnesses and income support to families rendered destitute
due to death or incapacitation of the breadwinner of the family.
I may also become involved in the campaign by visiting www.bhopal.net,
www.studentsforbhopal.org,
and www.bhopal.org.
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