
Successive Indian governments have failed Bhopal8217;s gas victims in a variety of ways. From the first shoddy efforts following the terrible incident to non-disbursal of compensation years after the tragedy 8212; it took a PIL and a resultant court ruling for the government to start moving on this front 8212; official responses have made clear there were two villains in the Bhopal case: the callously negligent factory management and the consistently indifferent government. That is why official attempts to act virtuous over Bhopal-related matters are particularly hard to swallow. More so, when after decades, some sensible proposals are being heard.
As this newspaper reported on Monday, Ratan Tata has volunteered to take the lead in remediation 8212; bureaucratese for a clean-up 8212; of the Bhopal site and Dow Chemicals, which bought Union Carbide in 1999, has offered to be part of the process, including making substantial financial contributions. Since the department of chemicals is a plaintiff in an MP district court case where the demand is that Dow should pay Rs 100 crore for the clean-up, the question before the government is this: should it let the issue of Dow investing in India get horribly complicated by taking time and pushing files over the chemical company8217;s legal liabilities, or should it sort out the issue quickly? The only victim in the case of a quick decision will be various departments8217; efforts to look good.