DECEMBER
3 - NEW DELHI
"Fifteen
years after one of the world's worst industrial disasters occurred,
virtually no legal and implementation infrastructure has been developed
to prevent corporations from getting away with murder. Even today, we
see a thousand Bhopals happening in slow motion in countries around
the world. On the occasion of the 15th anniversary of the Bhopal disaster,
we are calling upon the world governments to develop the measures required
to ensure that there are no more Bhopals," said Nityanand Jayaraman,
Greenpeace Asia Toxics campaigner based in India.
Greenpeace today presented a memorandum to Indian parliamentarians urging them to: 1) Demand Union Carbide to clean up the toxic wastes left behind at their factory site in Bhopal. 2) Develop the legal and technical infrastructure to ensure that Polluters Pay, and that corporations are held fully liable in the event of pollution or disasters. 3)
Develop a waste prevention policy framework which promotes waste avoidance
and reduction rather than environmental 4) Set binding long-term goals to ensure zero discharge of hazardous chemicals. Greenpeace also presented its findings from the Bhopal survey to the Indian Government with a note assuring them of support in their endeavours to make Union Carbide or its successor pay to clean up the contaminated factory site.
|