Bridget Hanna is director of the Bhopal Memory
Project, co-editor of The Bhopal Reader (2004),
and a volunteer with the International Campaign for Justice in Bhopal.
She is currently a graduate student in the Department
of Social Anthropology at Harvard University.
It's December again, time for Christmas
music,
office holiday parties--and the anniversary of the world's
worst industrial catastrophe, the Bhopal gas disaster. Twenty-two years
ago this week in Bhopal, India, a midnight feast of methyl isocyanate
and hydrogen cyanide was served to 400,000, courtesy of the U.S.-based
Union Carbide Corporation, now fully owned by Dow Chemical. The gas
killed about 8,000 people that night, and has slowly poisoned to death
at least another 12,000 since. In fact, in Bhopal today people are
still dying, suffering, drinking contaminated water, and worrying about
the future of their children, many of whom suffer from deformities or
genetic disorders.
Outside India, Bhopal was important for two reasons. Firstly it
publicly illustrated the failure of national and international legal
and regulatory systems to hold transnational corporations accountable
in a poor country--to date, Union Carbide has not yet faced criminal
charges or admitted responsibility for the disaster. Judges in the U.S.
refused the Indian government's request to try the civil case here, and
once back in India it was settled in a backroom deal, netting about
$500 per person for a lifetime of disability. Perhaps the best evidence
of the inadequacy of this compensation was provided by the "invisible
hand" of the much-admired free market--Union Carbide stock rose a
couple
of points when news of the low settlement broke. The second effect of
Bhopal was that it delivered a personal message about chemical safety
to communities around the world. The realization that a disaster like
Bhopal could happen in the U.S. was instrumental in the late 1980s
passage of the community Right to Know Act and parts of Superfund. But
22 years later, Bhopalis are still drinking contaminated water, and we
are less and less safe at here. Problems raised by Bhopal are more
pressing and more connected today than they were in 1984
The long-term failure of India and the U.S. to hold Dow/Carbide
accountable for what happened in Bhopal, has emboldened the chemical
industry. Safety is only as cost-effective as the relative value of
life and environmental damage, and since the Indian government has been
unable, and the American government unwilling, to force Dow/Carbide to
take responsibility, life remains cheap. Dow Chemical refuses to clean
up or provide important information regarding the gas to doctors
treating survivors. "Self-regulation" initiatives of the industr--such
as Bhopal-inspired "Responsible Care" program--reduce safety concern to
merely a public relations problem in order to prevent government
regulation.
Meanwhile Dow/Carbide continues to market in products known to
be
dangerous. Dursban, for example, a Dow Chemical pesticide banned in the
U.S. for its effects on children's brains, is still being advertised
and sold in India. The Indian government, under pressure by activists,
has continued (ponderously) to pursue the criminal case against Union
Carbide and its former CEO Warren Anderson (both facing charges of
culpable homicide). In 2003 they submitted extradition orders to the
American Justice department. The U.S. declined to offer up either Union
Carbide or Anderson for justice.
Paradoxically, while Union Carbide is a wanted criminal in India, its
owner Dow Chemica--with the blessing of the Indian government--is
planning a major expansion into the country. Perhaps its warm welcome
has something to do with the fact that Dow arrives hand-in-hand with
the American government. The U.S.-India CEO Forum, held in March of
this year (during the visit of George W. Bush to his new friend, Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh), included 25 top American executives. Among
them was Andrew Liveris, CEO of Dow Chemical. The Bush tour ended with
agreements to send nuclear power to India and mangos to the U.S., and
the release of a cheerful list of joint resolutions. The first item
insisted on "welcoming the report of the U.S.-India CEO Forum."
Other bullet points on the list--painfully ironic considering
the
Bhopal issue--reiterated commitments to "prevent the proliferation of
weapons of mass destruction" and improve "capabilities to respond to
disaster situations." It should be noted that the same methyl
isocyanate gas that leaked in Bhopal was used as a chemical weapon
against the Kurds by that exemplar of civic responsibility, Saddam
Hussein.
The fact that the U.S. government and Dow are still putting pressure on
India to absorb more chemical risk is one irony of Bhopal. But the
irony at home is just as chilling. In the 1980s, when concerned
community groups succeeded in getting some of the strongest legal
environmental protections passed here, the concern was a lethal
accident. Since 9/11 however, the concern has become terrorism. In New
Jersey alone there are 15 facilities where a terrorist act could cause
serious injury or death to over 100,000 people, and at least one that
could potentially kill over 12 million. Rather than tightening
regulation on chemical plants however, the current administration has
used this tragedy as an excuse to gut the protections--such as Right to
Know--that were put in place after Bhopal. Last week, the EPA announced
that it was beginning to close its nationwide network of libraries that
provide access to community groups about chemical hazards. And after
five years of the curtailment of civil liberties here in the name of
homeland security, the final recommendations of the 9/11 report
released in 2005 awarded U.S. chemical plants the dismal terrorism
preparedness grade of 'D.'
Bipartisan efforts in the Senate and House last year prepared a bill
that would have at least allowed states to enforce stricter safety
measures, and to order chemical companies to replace their most
dangerous and volatile components with safer alternatives. But last
September, a few Republicans working behind closed doors eliminated
those stipulations--along with provisions to protect water sources from
contamination--in a rider attached to the 2007 spending bill. We are
less safe than we were after Bhopal, partly because we have not helped
India to bring Union Carbide and Dow to justice.
Those who survived Bhopal advocate not just for their health and rights
but also to make sure there are 'No More Bhopals,' not in India, not
anywhere. They can't forget the disaster--plagued as they are by
chronic
illness and second-generation genetic damage. The medical effects of
the gas are still terribly understood and poorly managed, and many gas
victims have no choice but to drink water saturated with
contaminants--like mercury and tetrachloride--that leak from Union
Carbide's abandoned factory. They are subject not only to the
exigencies and failures of their own government, but to the weight and
influence of ours. Given the current regulatory climate however, it is
not clear that if tetrachloride were to show up in your eggnog this
month, it would be noticed. Even in the newly Democratic legislature,
passing real reforms to curb the behaviors of corporations will remain
an uphill battle as long as the chemical industry still thinks it can
get away with murder.