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New Delhi: A ministerial panel on the 1984 Bhopal gas tragedy has recommended that the government set aside Rs 1,500 crore as relief package for those affected by the industrial disaster.
The Group of Ministers (GoM) has recommended Rs 10 lakh to the next of kin of the dead, Rs 5 lakh for the permanently disabled and Rs 3 lakh for those disabled partially. But it will be the taxpayer who will have to pay for the cleaning the waste created by Union Carbide Corp’s chemical plant in Bhopal.
An amount of Rs 350 crore will be allotted to clean the toxic waste at the gas plant. The panel also cleared a proposal to clean up the plant site in Bhopal of the toxic waste, recommending that the poisonous material be buried.
But the onus of cleaning up the site has been laid on the Madhya Pradesh government with financial and technical assistance from the central government.
This means that Dow Chemicals, which took over Union Carbide in 2001, will be spared from the clean-up job that will need some Rs 300 crore.
In its report submitted to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Monday, the GoM headed by Home Minister P Chidambaram has looked at issues, including relief and rehabilitation for the victims, with key recommendations on addressing the wrongs in the disaster that killed thousands.
"We have dealt with all the issues, compensation, legal issues, including the issues of pursuing the extradition of Warren Anderson, the legal options available with the government of India," Chidambaram told reporters here after the panel finalised its report.
Anderson was Union Carbide boss in 1984 when on the night of December 2-3 nearly 40 tonnes of methyl isocynate gas leaked out of storage tanks of its Bhopal plant, killing an estimated 20,000 people over the years.
The report will be considered by the cabinet in a special meeting to be convened on Friday.
The GoM convened four sessions since Friday. It has recommended a petition in the Supreme Court, seeking reconsideration of its order diluting charges against the accused and fixing criminal liability in the tragedy, the sources said.
The Supreme Court in 1996 had diluted the charges against the accused from culpable homicide not amounting to murder to negligence.
The panel also recommended that the government take over the Bhopal Memorial Trust Hospital, which was established in the aftermath of the tragedy exclusively for the disaster victims. Some Rs 230 crore would be needed to upgrade it.
The high-level ministerial group reconstituted by Manmohan Singh last month held four sessions since Friday to finalise the recommendations. It was originally set up in 2008.
On June 7, a Bhopal court sentenced seven Indian executives of Union Carbide to only two years in jail and immediately granted them bail, a decision that sparked outrage in the country.
(With inputs from IANS)
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