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Indian Court's Verdict on Bhopal Disaster
June 14 2010
Bhopal Verdict
What a disgraceful sham -- the so-called resolution of a court case involving former high-ranking Indian employees of Union Carbide -- a deadly gas leak from who's plant killed as many as 25,000 poor villagers 25 years ago.
An Indian court has sentenced the seven employees to a jail term of two years and a fine of about $2000 -- chump change for all of them, especially Keshub Mahindra, then chairman of Union Carbide India, now the chairman of India's top utility vehicle and tractor maker Mahindra & Mahindra and worth billions.
The company itself, since acquired by Dow Chemical, was fined about $10,000 and of course no word about the gora sahibs, the Americans who headed Union Carbide at that time. They continue to live in peaceful retirement probably on some private island in the Caribbean.
I cannot even begin to describe the horrific fallout from this leak -- the illnesses, disabilities, sicknesses, thousands of sole breadwinners snatched away, a fallout that continues even today in one of the poorest of nations.
About half a million victims, each receiving less than $1000 for a lifetime of injury . Says Rachna Dhingra, a Bhopal rights activist: if all of this is not the biggest joke, then I don't know what is. A New York lawyer who fought for the victims told Al Jazeera TV that the seven defendants can now launch an appeal and then enjoy life for another 25 years -- so much for the world's largest democracy.
Think about it, I'm Zuhair Kashmeri.

