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32 years on, Bhopal gas victims still await adequate relief, justice

Voicing displeasure against both the state and Central governments for not doing enough for the Bhopal gas tragedy victims, an organisation fighting for their cause has alleged that 32 years after the world's worst industrial disaster, the victims are still waiting for adequate relief and justice.

Besides relief, the gas leak victims want stringent punishment to those responsible for it and also those who allegedly facilitated escape of the then Union Carbide chief, late Warren Anderson, said Bhopal Gas Peedit Mahila Udyog Sanghathan's, convenor, Abdul Jabbar.

"Even three decades after the disaster, neither the Madhya Pradesh government nor the Centre has attempted to undertake a comprehensive assessment of its impact or to take necessary remedial measures," Jabbar said.

Jabbar along with others has been fighting for justice to the gas victims.

More than 20,000 people died after methyl isocyanate gas leaked from a pesticide plant of Union Carbide India Limited in the Madhya Pradesh capital on the intervening night of December 2-3, 1984. Many more continued to suffer from its ill effects years later.

The impact on flora and fauna in the affected area was equally grave. He alleged that the state government has failed to address "adequately and with sensitivity" a host of socio- economic problems that confront the chronically sick, the elderly, the differently-abled, the widowed, and other vulnerable sections among the gas victims.

"The pittance, which was disbursed as compensation in most instances to these sections was never enough to take care of their daily needs. Finding gainful employment in accordance with the reduced capacity to work and to lead a dignified life has been a serious challenge," Jabbar said.

The state government has to give far more attention and provide far larger support to the most vulnerable sections of gas-victims than in the past, he said.
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