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Supreme Court reopens Bhopal Gas Tragedy case | The Supreme Court has reopened the Bhopal gas leak case and issued notices to all the accused on the basis of a petition
filed by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) seeking to restore against them the stringent charge of culpable homicide, which attracts a maximum punishment of ten years jail term. In in-chamber proceedings, a bench comprising Chief Justice
S H Kapadia and Justices Altamas Kabir and R V Raveendran on Tuesday sought response from
the accused on the curative petition filed by the CBI, which wanted a reconsideration
of the 1996 judgement, which diluted charges against former Union Carbide India
Chairman Keshub Mahindra and six others. The court listed the matter for hearing
after the completion of the service. The petition is silent on former Union Carbide
chief Warren Anderson. Earlier on August 11, senior Congress politician and former
Chief Minister of Madhya Pradesh Arjun Singh broke his silence in a short duration
discussion on Bhopal Gas Tragedy in the Rajya Sabha. Arjun Singh while revealing
truth behind the tragic incident said that he stayed in Bhopal when the incident
took place while the then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi was on tour that night.
"I offered to resign but Rajiv Gandhi told me not to step down. I did not run
away from my responsibility," said Arjun Singh. Arjun Singh also ensured Warren
Anderson's arrest when he arrived in Bhopal four days after the tragedy. "I gave
order in writing for Anderson's arrest. Though it was my duty to save Anderson
too, because I knew that people would lynch him. And it was my duty to see that
people don't harm him," he added. Earlier on August 5, Minister of State in the
Prime Minister's Office Prithviraj Chavan said the CBI has recently sent additional
evidence against former Union Carbide chief Warren Anderson to the Ministry of
External Affairs in connection with his extradition proceedings in the case. The
CBI had on August 2 filed a filed a curative petition in the Supreme Court seeking
restoration of stringent charge of culpable homicide not amounting to murder against
the accused in the 1984 Bhopal Gas tragedy case. The Group of Ministers (GoM)
constituted to examine all aspects of the 1984 Bhopal gas disaster, seeking Anderson's
extradition apart from measures to clean up the disaster site, had submitted the
report to Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh on June 21. The GoM had dealt with
all the issues - compensation, legal issues, including the issue of the extradition
of Warren Anderson, the legal options available to the Government of India, and
most importantly, remediation matters, and health related matters. Union Carbide
settled its liabilities to the Indian government in 1989 by paying 470 million
dollars before being bought by another US company, Dow Chemical. In the early
hours of December 3, 1984, around 40 metric tonnes of toxic methyl isocyanate
(MIC) gas leaked into the atmosphere and was carried by wind to surrounding slums.
The Government says around 3,500 died in one of India's most horrific of industrial
disasters. Rights activists, however, claim that 25,000 people have died so far. |
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