By Pervez Bari

Bhopal, June 29, 2023: Five organizations of the survivors of the 1984 Union Carbide disaster in Bhopal have congratulated researchers who have vindicated the gas victims’ stand on the magnitude and long-term consequences of the disaster.

The recently published scientific study on the health impact of the disaster nullifies the deliberate downplaying of the disaster’s impact by Union Carbide and the Indian government.

Addressing a press conference in the central Indian city of Bhopal on the children who were in the wombs of their mothers when they inhaled the poisonous gas, the organizations said that the conclusion of the study was startling.

The study found that people who were in their mother’s wombs during the Bhopal disaster were likely to have 8 times higher rates of cancer, higher rates of disability precluding employment, and lower levels of education.

Describing the findings of the study that has been published in an international scientific journal earlier in June, Nousheen Khan of Children Against Dow Carbide, said: “The study has also reported that the effects of the disaster could be seen, through data published by the Government of India, in people living as far as 100 km away from the factory at the time of the disaster.”

Rashida Bee, president of Bhopal Gas Peedit Mahila Stationery Karmchari Sangh, demanded that the Union Carbide and Dow Chemical pay compensation for the health damage to the generation born to the survivors after the disaster.

Emphasizing the role of the Indian government, Rachna Dhingra of the Bhopal Group for Information and Action said: “This scientific publication should be a wake-up call for the governments in the state and at the Centre. The research findings are all based on data published by government agencies. The government has taken away the Bhopal survivors’ rights to sue Union Carbide in exchange for promise to protect the interests of the victims of the corporation. If the governments do not take legal steps to make Union Carbide pay for damages to the next generation, it will be a betrayal of that promise.”

According to Balkrishna Namdeo of the Bhopal Gas Peedit Nirashrit Pensionbhogee Sangharsh Morcha, the publication also calls for immediate review of the decisions to abandon all medical research on Union Carbide’s victims in Bhopal. The government is also duty-bound to make reparations for the economic and social damage caused to the progeny of the survivors for its failure to provide rehabilitation, as remarked in the study.

“We will continue to struggle for justice as we have done for the last nearly four decades. We will make sure that more people in Bhopal and outside get to know about the findings on the damage caused to the unborn and have our demands heard by concerned national and international agencies,” said Shahzadi Bee of Bhopal Gas Peedit Mahila Purush Sangharsh Morcha.

Source: indiatomorrow.net