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Cambridge Council Dumps Dow Chemical, Cites Bhopal Tragedy
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09/26/2006
Cambridge Council Dumps Dow Chemical, Cites Bhopal Progressive Groups “weigh the evidence†at City Hall
Cambridge
City Hall - Activists representing peace, the environment, labor and
human rights climbed a giant ‘scale of justice’ at 5:30pm on Tuesday,
September 26th to celebrate Cambridge’s unanimous passage of the
‘Justice for Bhopal’ resolution. The legislation asks the City to take
shareholder and purchasing action against Dow Chemical until the
company faces its responsibilities to the Bhopal Chemical Disaster
survivors.
Several activists mounted a seesaw-like “scale
of justice†atop a “toxic waste barrel†at the Cambridge City Hall this
evening, stranding the “Dow Chemical Grim Reaper†in the air, waving a
scythe around angrily.
Dow Chemical, is the company
activists say is responsible for clean up and medical care for the half
million survivors of the 1984 Bhopal Chemical Disaster. Supporters of
the Resolution say it will hold the corporation accountable for its
human rights violations in Bhopal, India, as well as protect Cambridge
residents from some of Dow’s toxic products. Councilor Henrietta Davis,
Councilor Marjorie Decker and Vice Mayor Tim Toomey sponsored the
resolution which was strongly supported by local labor, peace and
justice groups.
Harvard St. resident Namarata Bhasin commented,
“Ten to 15 people are dying each month in Bhopal, yet Dow Chemical
continues to avoid responsibility. These poisons did not come from
nowhere, we cannot let them continue to get away with murder.â€
“This
resolution is the strongest action Cambridge can take to hold a
corporate criminal accountable. We do not ever want a disaster like
Bhopal to occur again. This kind of lawlessness cannot be tolerated.â€
Said Greater Coalition for Justice in Bhopal member Aquene Freechild
said, dressed in white to represent the peace movement resolution
backers.
The resolution asks the Cambridge Retirement
Board to use their ~12,000 shares in Dow to co-file shareholder
resolutions regarding Bhopal and to divest of Dow bonds until Dow
addresses the survivor’s demands. It also requests a report of what Dow
products the city buys and options for substitution.
“People
concerned with how our increasingly globalized economy develops, should
be thrilled about this policy,†said Nate Stell from local Amnesty
International Group 133. “Allowing Dow Chemical to act with
impunity sets a very dangerous precedent in international commerce with
respect to human rights. It’s important to that we let Dow and
other would-be offenders know that we will not stand for these kinds of
abuses.â€
Harvard student Kaveri Rajaraman said, “Dow Chemical
continues to violate safety standards, and the victims of Dow in the US
and abroad continue to mount. This resolution will push for clean up of
the toxic contamination in Bhopal and hold Dow to better safety
standards.â€
The 1984 Union Carbide Chemical Disaster in Bhopal,
India has left more than 20,000 people dead in the past 22 years. Union
Carbide, bought by Dow Chemical in 2001, has refused to face
manslaughter charges in Bhopal or to clean up the site that has
poisoned the drinking water for 20,000 people according to Amnesty
International.
Endorsing Organizations Include: Activate
South Asia (Harvard) - Alliance for a Secular and Democratic South Asia
- Amnesty International Groups 133 & 563 (Somerville &
Cambridge) - Area 4 Coalition - Association for India’s Development
-Boston Mayday Coalition (labor) - Cambridge United for Justice with
Peace - Clean Water Action (Mass.) - Dollarsandsense.org -
Environmental Health Fund - Groundwork USA - Harvard Initiative for
Peace and Justice – Harvard Law School Advocates for Human Rights
Environmental Group - Healthy Building Network - Mass Coalition for
Occupational Safety and Health - Mass. Jobs with Justice - South Asia
Center - Stop the Wars Coalition - Student Labor Action Movement
www.cambridge4bhopal.org - www.studentsforbhopal.org - www.bhopal.net- www.thetruthaboutdow.org
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