Olympic
destruction and resignation
Chairman
of the Federal Reserve Ben Bernanke thinks gold maybe better than
Libor rates after all. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton joins
al-Qaida in Syria. We also talk to Meredith Alexander, Policy Chief
at Action Aid, about why she resigned as a London Olympics 2012
Commissioner over sponsorship of the London games. These and much
more are all reviewed in this edition of Double Standards with Afshin
Rattansi.
Bhopal victims stage their own 'Olympics' in protest against Dow Chemicals
RT,
27 July, 2012
Dozens of disabled kids affected by the 1984 Bhopal disaster, one of the world’s worst-ever industrial catastrophes, have held their own Games to protest against the London Olympics sponsorship by Dow Chemical.
The
children, aged five to 16 and cheered by their nearest and dearest,
have participated in 10 sports in Bhopal during the “Special
Olympics". The move was aimed to attract attention to the
responsibilities of the company, which has a contract with the IOC
until 2020 and, in particular, is a sponsor of London Olympics.
Dow
Chemical has repeatedly denied any involvement in the tragedy and
refuses to add to the $470-million compensation paid out in 1989.
The
Bhopal "Olympics" kicked off with children suffering from
cerebral palsy, partial paralysis and mental disabilities parading in
wheelchairs and walking with the assistance of others around an
outdoor stadium in the shadow of the old pesticide plant.
One
of the competitions was called "the crab walk": three
children who were unable to stand propelled themselves down the
25-meter racecourse with their hands.
And
one little boy was running back and forth on the field even when no
race was on.
"The
children are born like this because of the gas," Kesar Bai, a
45-year-old mother from a slum near the old pesticide plant, told
AFP. She firmly believes that the disaster and its long-standing
influence caused her son Pratap's severe cerebral palsy.
"I
was thinking 'If there hadn't been this tragedy, then so many would
not be born like this'," she said, adding that in the area
around her shack there were 10-12 ill kids.
An
Indian mother of a disabled child suffering the effects of the 1984
Bhopal disaster, cries during a "Special Olympics" in
Bhopal on July 26, 2012 (AFP Photo / Prakash Singh)
Jamila
Bi brought her wheelchair-bound 11-year-old grandson Amaan to take
part.
"Today
these children are participating, in spite of what Union Carbide did
to them," Bi told AP. "We are happy that they will walk.
Those people will see that in spite of what they did these children
are still participating."
Some
25,000 residents of Bhopal died in the aftermath of a massive 1984
gas leak in a pesticide factory owned by the American company Union
Carbide.
Immediately
after tonnes of toxic gas leaked, survivors remember the slums
surrounding the pesticide plant being packed with people, many
unconscious, vomiting or frothing at the mouth.
"We
woke up at 2am in the night. Everyone was running. If you fell down,
they ran over you," Bai remembers.
In
2001, Union Carbide liable for the disaster was purchased by Dow
Chemical.
The
latter, however, has done little to improve the situation in the
disaster-stricken zone.
According
to activists’ estimates, 500,000 people are still suffering from
illnesses developed after the tragedy, including cancer, blindness
and various birth defects.
"We
have been protesting against Dow's sponsorship [of the Olympic Games]
for a year now; we want them to be dropped," organizers'
spokeswoman Rachna Dhingra told Reuters. "But we have realized
this is not going to happen."
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