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          | Bhopal protests move online |  
        
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                | Mon 10 March 2003 |  
              
                | INDIA/Mumbai |  
              
                 
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                | Dow Chemical is going to court 
                  soon in India. Not as the defendants for their ongoing 
                  responsibility for the Bhopal disaster, but as the plaintiffs. 
                  They're suing (we're not making this up) the SURVIVORS of the 
                  disaster for protesting at a Dow plant. |  
              
                 
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                The company is also pressing for US$10,000 
                  in compensation from the survivors for previous peaceful 
                  protests. Dow wants the courts to order the survivors to 
                  physically stay away from Dow plants and Dow employees. (The 
                  technical term for this legal ploy is the "out of sight, out 
                  of mind defence." OK, we made that up.)
  But pesky 
                  internet activists are showing Dow there is no escape, and 
                  providing survivors with a way they can stay far away from Dow 
                  plants and Dow employees, but still exercise their right to 
                  protest and demand accountability of Dow: a virtual sit-in at 
                  Dow's world-wide greenwash headquarters on the internet, 
                  www.bhopal.com
  Be part 
                  of the virtual sit in. This protest starts on 
                  Monday 10 March and will continue untill Dow drops the court 
                  case against the survivors.
  Dow's unapologetic website, 
                  which includes an "incident review," denies that Dow purchased 
                  any liability for the disaster when they bought Union Carbide, 
                  which was the majority stakeholder in the Bhopal plant. The 
                  site also claims that "The legacy of those killed and injured 
                  is a chemical industry that adheres voluntarily to strict 
                  safety and environmental standards." You may want to read that 
                  sentence again just to be sure you got it right. 
  Virtual sit in?
  A virtual sit-in 
                  is simply an automated way of sending lots of traffic to a 
                  website. Activists around the world park their browsers on a 
                  page which does nothing more than automatically load the 
                  bhopal.com site several times a minute. In the same way that a 
                  real-world sit-in disrupts traffic, the virtual sit-in makes 
                  the target site less responsive and slow. Eventually, the site 
                  may become so crowded with protestors that it stops serving 
                  information completely.
  The sit in was the idea of the 
                  legendary internet activist group the yesmen who have 
                  already been giving Dow a black eye with dowethics.com. 
                  Andy Bichlbaum from the group said: "We're going to continue 
                  representing Dow more honestly than they represent themselves 
                  until Dow decides to fulfill its responsibilites in Bhopal. 
                  And this protest is going to continue until Dow drops its 
                  court case against the survivors."
  The ongoing disaster in 
                  Bhopal
  After the 1984 gas leak, which has killed 
                  20,000 people to date, Union Carbide abandoned the factory 
                  site and fled India. For 18 years since, the toxic wastes left 
                  by Union Carbide have been bleeding poisons into the 
                  groundwater and affecting the health of the people living near 
                  the factory. Dow merged with Union Carbide in 2001 and despite 
                  paying up for Union Carbide's asbestos liabilities, it refuses 
                  to do the same for Bhopal.
  Dow has faced may protests 
                  since taking over Union Carbide but suing the victims 
                  represent a new low in Dow's attempts to gag its critics. Most 
                  of the survivors come from the poorest sections of Indian 
                  society. Despite this Dow is not only attempting to prevent 
                  peaceful protests at Dow locations but is asking for a 
                  monetary settlement from the victims. The amount it seeks 
                  represents an average survivors earnings over 10 to 20 years. 
                  The cause? Dow's "loss of business".
  The virtual 
                  sit-in, organised by the yesmen, follows on from their hugely 
                  successful spoof of Dow's website, currently located at http://dowethics.com/r/Homepage/index.html. 
                  Dow has been playing whack-a-mole with the site, launching 
                  several abortive legal attempts to shut it down, only to have 
                  new activists set it up in a new spot on the interent. The 
                  site takes a slightly more honest look at why Dow refuses to 
                  clean up Bhopal and why image is everything to Dow. 
                  
  Maybe this protest will help show Dow that the only 
                  way to really silence protest will be to spend a fraction of 
                  its huge US$28 billion annual turnover on cleaning up 
                  Bhopal?
  Take 
                  action:
  Already got your browser busy with the 
                  virtual 
                  sit in? Discover more ways to keep 
                  the pressure on Dow. 
  Find out 
                  more:
  Read 
                  why Bhopal.com is more about myths than reality. (pdf file 
                  46Kb)
  Discover the true facts about Bhopal, minus the 
                  corporate spin, at these sites:
  bhopal.net greenpeace.org/bhopal
 
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