Bhopal
disaster 20 Years
More
than 7,000 people died within a matter of days when toxic gases leaked
from a chemical plant in Bhopal, India on the night of 2/3 December
1984. Over the last 20 years exposure to the toxins has resulted in
the deaths of a further 15,000 people as well as chronic and debilitating
illnesses for thousands of others for which treatment is largely ineffective.
The disaster shocked
the world and raised fundamental questions about government and corporate
responsibility for industrial accidents that devastate human life and
local environments. Yet 20 years later, the survivors still await just
compensation, adequate medical assistance and treatment, and comprehensive
economic and social rehabilitation. The plant site, has still not been
cleaned up. Despite determined efforts by survivors to secure justice,
they have been denied adequate compensation and appropriate and timely
medical assistance and rehabilitation.
The Bhopal case
illustrates how companies evade their human rights responsibilities
and underlines the need to establish a universal human rights framework
that can be applied to companies directly. Governments have the primary
responsibility for protecting the human rights of communities endangered
by the activities of corporations, such as those employing hazardous
technology. However, as the influence and reach of companies have grown,
there has been a developing consensus that they must be brought within
the framework of international human rights standards urging people
around the world to put pressure on Dow and the Indian Government demanding
that the site is cleaned up and affected communities are compensated.
Calling on the Indian
Government to promptly assess the damage to health and the environment
caused by the leak and the contamination recommending the implementation
of a global human rights framework for business, based on the UN Norms
for Business. To hold companies accountable and guarantee redress for
the victims it is imperative that such standards are implemented and
mechanism to enforce them are put in place.
Source:
Amnesty International.