Bhopal gas victims’ outfits oppose plant demolition

PTI Updated - March 12, 2018 at 11:27 AM.

Bhopal gas victims’ organisations have strongly opposed the proposed demolition of the defunct Union Carbide plant here which killed thousands and maimed lakhs following the leakage of the deadly Methyl-Iso-Cyanate (MIC) gas on December 2-3, 1984.

“It is an attempt to weaken the criminal case pending in the sessions court as the defunct plant is an important evidence in the case against Union Carbide,” the Gas Peedit Sangharsh Sahyog Samiti Convenor, Ms Sadhna Karnik, told PTI.

Ms Karnik was reacting to the opinion expressed by the Union Environment Minister, Mr Jairam Ramesh, on the issue.

“Though the State Government and NGOs wants to preserve a part from where the gas leaked as monument, the Centre and the Group of Ministers (GoMs) on Bhopal gas tragedy want to raze the building of the Union Carbide Factory due to mercury contamination,” Mr Jairam Ramesh said.

However, the Centre has not taken a final call in the matter, he had said adding that the decision will be taken in July-August, after the State Government and NGOs put forward their points.

“Tank no. 610 and the existing structure at the factory site is an evidence against the company. How can they demolish it?” Ms Karnik asked.

“There are many ways for making it free from contamination and if the very structure was removed then creating a permanent memorial will have no meaning,” she said adding that the move will be opposed whenever a meeting in this regard is held.

The Gas Peedit Mahila Udyog Sangthan Convenor, Mr Abdul Jabbar, said: “no doubt the structure existing at the defunct plant has weakened but part of the plant made of cast iron can easily be preserved. If they raze the structure then how can a memorial be created at the site.”

Even at Nazi camps and Hiroshima-Nagasaki in Japan where nuclear bombs were dropped, remains of the structure were preserved so that people remain aware of the cost humanity paid for that act, he said.

When asked about the mercury contamination existing in the plant, Mr Jabbar said it cannot be doubted but there are ways to detoxify it so that it can be preserved.

Mr Jabbar did not rule out that it may be a ploy on the part of the MNCs to completely erase the memories of the world’s worst industrial disaster.

The infamous gas tragedy hit Bhopal on the intervening nights of December 2-3, 1984, killed over 15,000 people and maimed lakhs leaving several others scarred for life.

Published on May 27, 2011 05:49