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Death came in clouds — 25 years later, the horrors in Bhopal, India,
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Death came in clouds — 25 years later, the horrors in Bhopal, India,
continue 
M. P. Basheer | Arab News 


ASIYA Bi still remembers the horror. It was just past midnight and she
woke up to the sound of her younger daughter Rubeena coughing. In the
dim light from the street lamp, she saw the room was filled with white
fog. Then her elder daughter Mohsina began coughing. Within five
minutes, Asiya Bi’s eight-member family had woken up to cries of people
shouting “bhaago, bhaago.” Asiya recalled, “Our eyes were burning. I
also felt as if I were inhaling fire. Some of our neighbors who were
also coughing came in panic and told us to get out of the house. I went
into the street with my children, carrying Rubeena and holding Mohsina’s
hand. We joined the running crowd.”

In Hindi, “bhaggo, bhaggo” means “run, run.” During the early hours of
Dec. 3, 1984, nearly half a million people like Asiya Bi and her
children ran in panic through the gullies and streets of Bhopal in
central India. They were desperately trying to escape the deadly gases
leaking from the Union Carbide pesticide plant. Just five minutes after
midnight, the plant had released an estimated 42 tons of toxic methyl
isocyanate (MIC) gas, exposing more than half the city’s population to
lethal chemicals. The first official death toll was 2,259. The state
government has confirmed a total of 3,787 gas-related deaths.
International bodies such as Green Peace and Amnesty International
estimate that 8,000-10,000 died within 72 hours. Some employees of
Bhopal Municipal Corporation have testified that they buried more than
150,000 dead bodies. 

The cloud of gas, composed mainly of material denser than the
surrounding air, stayed close to the ground and spread outwards through
the community. Owing to their small size, women, children and short
people inhaled higher concentrations. Many people were trampled as they
tried to escape. Those who ran inhaled more than those who fled by
vehicle. A mixture of poisonous gases flooded the city and thousands of
people had succumbed by morning. “I lost my mother in the mad stampede,
my younger sister by noon, and two cousins the same afternoon,” says
Alimuddeen Khan who is now 42, and looks at least 20 years older. Within
a few days, even the leaves on trees turned yellow and fell to the
ground. 

But Union Carbide’s final gift to the city was not only one night.
Children, damaged beyond recognition, were born in Bhopal. “In a sample
of 865 women who lived within two miles of the plant and who were
pregnant at the time of the leak,” according to a survivors’ website,
“nearly half the number of pregnancies did not result in live births.”
Of the 486 live births, “14 percent died in the first 30 days.” 

A researcher at the Jawaharlal Nehru Cancer Hospital and Research Centre
says that damaged children are still being born. “They are born with
deformities such as cleft palate, three eyes, all fingers joined, one
extra finger, one testicle, different skull shapes, and Down’s syndrome.
Getting through the first few years is no guarantee of survival.”

Union Carbide left the city without cleaning the site. A quarter century
after the disaster, chemicals spill from rotting sacks and drums. Each
monsoon washes them deeper into the subsoil. People are still drinking
poisoned water. Lethal chemicals lie exposed to wind and rain.
Twenty-five monsoons have washed them deep into the groundwater, which
flows northeastward, causing severe damage to those living there.

For all these years, the chemicals that Union Carbide used have been
ignored, left to leach into the groundwater. That groundwater feeds tube
wells and hand pumps from which 25,000 people drink. Most of these
people were nowhere near the leak in 1984. They belong to a new category
of victims, the “paani peedith” — “the water affected.” And every year
their numbers and their symptoms increase. Says Satinath Sarangi, who
leads the Bhopal survivors’ movement: “Thousands of tons of highly toxic
chemicals remain in the factory. The poisoning has been going on for
decades. But the company has continually denied that the factory was
contaminated or was responsible for polluting water.”

But it is clear from Union Carbide documents obtained by survivors’
organizations in US courts that the company carried out tests and knew
as long ago as 1989 that the soil and water within its boundaries were
heavily contaminated. “It chose not to make this knowledge public,
instead continuing to deny that any dangers existed. Carbide watched in
silence as people were poisoned a second time”, says Indra Sinha, a
writer and campaigner for the Bhopal victims. 

In 1999 Green Peace tested the soil and water near the factory and found
mercury levels 6,000,000 times higher than normal in addition to more
than 30 chemicals in the water, many known to cause birth defects and
cancers. A 2001 study found lead, mercury and the factory’s poisonous
signature in the breast milk of new mothers. In a BBC investigation
broadcast on Nov. 14, 2004, it was reported that the site was still
contaminated with “thousands of metric tons of toxic chemicals,
including benzene hexachloride and mercury, held in open containers or
loose on the ground. A sample of drinking water from a well near the
site had levels of contamination 500 times higher than the maximum
limits recommended by the World Health Organization.” Union Carbide
disclaimed all responsibilities for the state of the factory and
Carbide’s owner, Dow Chemical, said it was not responsible either. After
1984, Carbide had only one idea: to get out of India before its
liability was fully calculated. This required that it restrict proof of
the extent of damage and unload assets as fast as possible. They did
both ruthlessly. For example, Carbide refused to disclose proprietary
research that would have helped doctors understand the physiological
effects of gas exposure. In the absence of proper medical information
and treatment protocols, drugs for temporary symptomatic relief have
been the mainstay of medical care ever since the disaster. The Indian
Council of Medical Research (ICMR) began a study on the impact of the
gas on the next generation — this was mysteriously cancelled when
results began to point to extreme damage. The ICMR has yet to publish
the findings of the research studies it carried out involving over
80,000 survivors. Finally, in March 2009, Indian scientists decided to
investigate the long-term health effects of the worst industrial
disaster in history.

Meanwhile, very little of the money from the settlement with Union
Carbide went to the survivors, and people in the area feel betrayed by
both the company and their own politicians. Union Carbide sold its
Indian subsidiary which had operated the Bhopal plant to Eveready
Industries India Limited in 1994. The Dow Chemical Company purchased
Union Carbide in 2001 for $10.3 billion in stock and debt. Dow has
publicly stated several times that the Union Carbide settlement payments
fulfilled Dow’s financial responsibility for the disaster. Dow did not,
however, buy Indian Union Carbide. That was split up, renamed, and
bought by the Indian government after the tragedy. Under the laws of
both India and the US, Union Carbide should pay for after-pollutions as
well, but Carbide has spent the last 25 years ignoring an Indian court
summons. Warren Anderson, Union Carbide CEO at the time of the disaster,
is now living very comfortably in the US.

Having nothing and no one to turn to, Bhopal Gas victims were forced to
help themselves; they discovered that the poorest slums were full of
talent. They have set up their own innovative medical clinic which has
provided free care to almost 35,000 people and won international awards
for the quality of its work. Their fight stopped being about personal
recompense a long time ago. To a great extent, it is about the lives of
their children and their children’s children. As Indra Sinha says, “It’s
a struggle of those who have nothing against those who have it all.
Great catastrophe, followed by years of sickness, poverty and injustice
can overwhelm and crush the extraordinary human spirit, or it can enable
ordinary people to discover what they are. Such people find that they
have the grit to survive.” And they are still fighting. 

— M. P. Basheer is a South Asian journalist based in India and can be
contacted at mpbash...@gmail.com) 
        
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