Nirvana for Indians once and for ever – Get Anderson extradited
What will happen if 90 yr old Anderson is brought to India and is punished for a maximum of 10 years,which is not going to happen,as he can go for appeal in a higher court,which will take 25+ more years for the judgement to come and by then,he would have already merged with soil..
As the country seethes with anger over denial of justice to victims of Bhopal gas tragedy, the CBI officer who probed the world’s worst-ever industrial disaster has made the stunning charge that the investigating agency was forced in 1994 by the Narasimha Rao government not to press for extradition of Warren Anderson, the fugitive CEO of Union Carbide.The Narasimha Rao-led Congress government was in power from 1991 to 1996.[..]
Congress party,like others, should indeed be appreciated for accommodating so many great actors.Though they hardly know anything about better governance,they can earn bread and jam by making use of their acting skills..
“GoM should submit the report in 10 days”..of something that happened 26yrs ago… 🙄
“We are trying to get Anderson”..and thatz why they arranged an airplane for him then.. 🙄
“US is not giving away Anderson”…as if we are done wih our part while still having laws that help MNCs get away easily for their social responsibility and liability.. 🙄
Go ahead UPA,sign the nuclear-bill as of today,and let the remaining Indians too attain nirvana ,by means of a nuclear-accident..Afterall,such plants are certainly going to be established in non-metros where high-end people like you won’t live and so any possible accident is of least concern to you,..Its just petty aam-aadmi like me who is going to suffer..Go ahead..
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.A report on Anderson,published 7 rs ago,on Greenpeace site..[…………..]
Warren Anderson, Union Carbide CEO at the time of the world’s worst industrial disaster in Bhopal, India, lives a life of luxury in New York State. Anderson has been hiding in the US since an explosion at his company’s plant in Bhopal caused the immediate deaths of thousands of people and led to life long suffering for almost 120,000 survivors. He is wanted in India to face charges of culpable homicide over the deaths of 20,000 people since the disaster.
On the night of the disaster, December 3, 1984, an explosion at Union Carbide’s pesticide plant caused 40 tonnes of lethal gas to seep into Bhopal. Six safety measures designed to prevent a gas leak had either malfunctioned, were turned off or were otherwise inadequate. In addition, the safety siren, intended to alert the community should an incident occur at the plant, was turned off.
As the Union Carbide boss, Anderson knew about a 1982 safety audit of the Bhopal plant, which identified 30 major hazards. Rather than fix them in Bhopal, only the company’s identical plant in the US was fixed. Neglecting these hazards in Bhopal caused the deadly explosion. Anderson flew to India after the disaster but to the company’s surprise, police investigating the disaster immediately arrested him. He subsequently jumped bail and was flow by private jet back to the US, never to return to India.
While fleeing the law in India his company abandoned the polluted factory site allowing it to poison Bhopal residents for 18 years. He did not disclose the composition of the poisonous gas (the company still claims this is a trade secret), thus preventing doctors from properly treating the 120,000 people who are still sick. Company lawyers ensured survivors only got between US$300-500 compensation each, if they were ‘lucky’, for their ruined lives. Dow Chemical took over Union Carbide in 2001 but it claims Union Carbide has ‘settled’ the issue of Bhopal.
Despite being wanted in India and by Interpol, Indian and US authorities have been inactive for the last 18 years. US authorities claimed they could not find Anderson and India has not pursued his extradition from the US for fear of damaging US investment and trade. However last year with the help of a UK newspaper we tracked him down to a luxury home in Long Island, New York. Life as a corporate criminal in the states is hardly difficult – Anderson’s yearly golf club membership alone is 3-4 times the average compensation for a Bhopal survivor.
Possibly spurred by Anderson’s discovery and growing protests at home, the Indian Government has formally filed an extradition request with the US. Better 18 years late than never. The order is likely to be ignored by the US and, no doubt, India hopes it can relieve pressure at home while relying on the US inaction.
Just maybe Warren Anderson will be back in Bhopal in time to answer charges in court about the disaster in time for its 20th anniversary. Unlikely, but at least more likely now than any other time in the last 19 years.