The verdict of the chief judicial magistrate's court on Union Carbide and its officials over the death of more than 25,000 and toxic exposure to over half a million people in Bhopal has caused more pain to victims of the industrial gas leak of 1984 than the tragedy itself.
While civil society activists are planning to appeal against it in a higher court, the verdict is being blamed on the decision taken by the Supreme Court in 1996 to dilute charges against the accused.
Human rights groups and lawyers are in favour of going directly to the Supreme Court to seek a reversal of its order of 1996, which diluted charges against Union Carbide from culpable homicide to mere rash and negligent act (equivalent to a car accident).
A top lawyer, who did not want to be named, pointed out that there was a precedent of the Supreme Court reversing its own decision and admitting its own mistake in the Carbide case itself. And it can do so once again.
In 1989, the Supreme Court had upheld the settlement between Union Carbide and the government and allowed for a low compensation, quashing all criminal cases against the company. However, the same court in 1991 reversed the order on a review petition and said criminal cases could not be quashed.
Today, the CJM court's verdict derives from the dilution of charges against the company, which was allowed by the Supreme Court in 1996.
Chandra Bhooshan of the Centre for Science and Environment says: "With the kind of dilution of charges by Supreme Court in 1996, there was nothing much that the trial court could have achieved."
He adds, "This kind of approach to human tragedy
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