Showing posts with label chemicals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chemicals. Show all posts

Tuesday, 28 November 2023

Biggest man-made disaster?

The Railway Men: The Untold Story of Bhopal 1984 (miniseries; 2023)
Director: Shiv Rawail

I have come to know of a few people who were working on the Malaysian Railway Lines (Keretapi Tanah Melayu, KTM). They were working at a time when owning a car was a luxury, and interstate travel meant travelling on the train. So much responsibility fell on the shoulders of the Station Master of a railway station. Much like the captain of a ship, the Station Master would take care of his station like a baby. The post carried such pride in the community that people would have forgotten his name. They would just address him as Station Master, much like how one would address a Doctor or Pastor, not by name.

Amongst our family circle lived a distant relative who was the Station Master of the Bukit Mertajam Railway Station. The job was a prestigious one, and it carried much prestige. Bukit Mertajam was an essential and busy station. Even though his name was Jaganathan, everyone referred to his family as the 'Station Master's' family. My sisters and I call him 'Train Tata' (Train Grandfather). Train Tata was married to his job, besides having ten children. He would personally be present at the station every time a train stopped there. His pride and joy were his sparkling and shiny railway shifters.  

I never had the opportunity to have an up-and-personal conversation with Train Tata about his job. The main character in this miniseries, Iftekaar Siddiqui, reminded me a lot of him.

The tragic industrial accident in Bhopal hit our shores back in 1983. From the occasional glimpses we got from the foreign news section of the national TV, we understood the devastation it caused. Later in my working life, I did encounter people who were right smack in the heat of things, doing medicine in Bhopal, albeit a few years after the biggest man-made disaster in history. As its death toll exceeded 15,000, after taking the long-term damages that it caused, it is said to have been a greater disaster than Chornobyl or Twin Towers. 

Watching the fiasco unfold on Netflix, we get a better understanding of the background of it all. The blast in the Union Carbide chemical factory was a volcano waiting to explode, as described by an independent journalist after his friend died in a minor industrial accident three years previously. The whole thing was hushed. 

Working with suboptimal pieces of machinery and ill-trained staff, even the owners of the pesticide-making company, who is credited for making the atomic bomb, knew they were sitting on a disaster. An independent assessor even remarked that the methyl isocyanate (MIC) the factory stores were storing was at risk of leakage. The faulty cooling system, substandard safety measures, and defective pressure gauges could potentially release poisonous cyanide into the environment. Antidote was known by a few, but this information was deliberately kept away from the public and even the administrative agencies. Very few workers were cognisant of the standard operative procedure in case of a catastrophic gas leak. 

Minor blemishes did happen but were kept under wraps. The disaster occurred on December 2, 1984, when the system overheated and poisonous gas leaked into the atmosphere. 

The miniseries tells of how the railway men of Bhopal station and the GM of railways tirelessly went out of their way to render their services to help people affected by the gas leak. Even though the account of events that happened that night is told in a dramatic fashion, the essential characters in the series did exist, but with different names. Unfortunately, the film failed to mention the names of these unsung heroes at the credit in a way to show appreciation.

Iftekaar Siddiqui, the Station master character, could be Ghulam Destagir, who protected passengers and arranged a safe passage out of Bhopal Junction. The selfless investigative journalist named Jagmohan Kulwant here is Rajkumar Deswani in real life. He went on to win many journalistic awards. There was indeed a railway inspector who was on a surprise visit to Jhansi when the incident happened. He was Gauri Shanker, the General Manager of the Northern Railways. In the series, he was known as Rati Pandey.

The moviemakers decided to spice up the story by including bits about the Sikh witchhunt, as Indira Gandhi had been assassinated a month prior. The part about governmental cover-up is probably not stretching the truth. There were reports of hushing about the severity of the mishap, malaise on the part of rescue efforts and protection of its foreign owners.  

Friday, 1 May 2020

Know the two sets of Laws


Dark Waters (2019)

One thing the lockdown has shown us is that there are two sets of rules for people. One for affluent, the one perched atop the highest branch and the other for those scrawling at the lowest branch or doodling on the ground. The one close to the ruling party will get just a friendly slap on the wrist while the brunt of the long arm of the law would descend upon the nobody.

An 80-year-old vagabond who was waiting for his free food was slapped with a RM1000/= compound without much deliberation. He risks imprisonment. A minister was seen sharing meals with his supporters, and a deputy minister was enjoying his birthday bash without a care in the world of the MCO. The prowling digital spies did manage to capture the moment for the public to judge, but the law seems to be dragging its feet. This type of subservience by the authorities to the people of power is no alien to this country alone.

Beware, there is a 2015 horror flick named 'Dark Water' (singular) which is different from the remake of Japanese movie with almost the same name. 

This 2019 film is based on real events. It tells the story of the fight of a lone farmer, Wilbur Tennant, who took legal suits against DuPont, a giant chemical company. It started in 1995 when the farmer discovered that his cattle, 190 of them, had died mysteriously with bloated organs and blackened teeth. He suspected that the cause could be due to the dumping of chemicals upstream. He tried to get the help of the authorities, but instead, he was slapped with a fine for improper farming.

Living in dire circumstances, he approached an old friends' grandson, Robert Billot, a hotshot lawyer who makes his fortune defending multinational chemical companies. Initially, reluctant to waste his time on an unrewarding case, he finally caved in to investigate the farmer's complaint. 

He became interested when the environmental impact assessment report showed no contaminants, but DuPont's internal investigations repeatedly showed some unknown abbreviated compound. He also noticed that many dwellers of the town had an unusually high incidence of cancers. Everyone in the town looked at Tennant and Billot as trouble makers as DuPont had contributed so much in the upliftment and upkeep of that town, Parkersburg, West Virginia. Things had really changed for the better since DuPont set up a plant there. They thought their misery was a small price to pay for development.

Using the tentacles of the law to his advantage, Billot came to discover that compound was indeed PFOA, a fluorated hydrocarbon, which was used to make Teflon coating in non-stick pans.

It came to light that PFOA or C8 and PFOS had poisoned the land and their drinking water. Now, everybody wanted to join in the suit against the giant. It indeed became a David versus Goliath match. The mega-company used all the might of their finances to quash dissidence. Lawsuits were not affordable for the average Joe. Neither the legal fraternity nor the administrative bodies are laypeople friendly. Just like how flies are drawn to garbage, power begets influence.


Robert Bilott and Mark Ruffalo, who portrayed him.
At the end of the day, the general public is left only with a loud public voice via civil society bodies, the fourth estate and an unbiased judiciary system.

But wait, is the legal system here to carry out the law or to mete out justice?

In real life, Robert Bilott went through many financial and familial turmoils pursuing the matter, for each and every defendant, 3,500 of them. After a long battle that spanned ten-over years (Tennant had died then), he won the first three multimillion-dollar settlements against DuPont, and DuPont settled the class action for $671 million. Du Pont, however, seems unperturbed. They are still going on business as usual with other joint ventures.

For our own knowledge, Teflon is marketed as other variants and have made their way to our household in various forms - water-resistant furniture and carpets, wrinkle-free and water-repellant clothing, lubricants, pizza boxes, dental floss and many more.





“Be afraid. Be very afraid.”*