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August 11, 2007
Bhopalis give PM, Tata spoof awards for treachery

Click picture to see all 12 winners receiving their tribute
*For immediate release*
Bhopal Gas Peedit Mahila Stationery Karmachari Sangh
Bhopal Gas Peedit Mahila Purush Sangarsh Morcha
Bhopal Group for Information and Action
Click here for photos of the event
English & Hindi press coverage here & here.
11 August, 2007. New Delhi -- In a dramatized ceremony, peppered with satire, Bhopal survivors'organizations posturing as "Dalal Foundation" gave away Mir Zafar awards for treachery to twelve eminent people. These politicians, bureacrats and others were "awarded" for their efforts to bury Dow Chemical's liabilities in the Bhopal tragedy cases, and clear the way for Dow and Carbide to freely do business in India. Timed to mark the 250 th anniversary of the Battle of Plassey, where Mir Zafar betrayed his troops and cut a deal with the British East India Company, organizers of the ceremony likened the present Government's kow-towing to US Corporations to Zafar's deal-making. Such Government's actions, they said, favoured the elite and exacted a heavy toll on the lives of common Indian citizens.
The list of award-winners include senior Ministers Kamalnath, P. Chidambaram and Manmohan Singh, noted industrialists Ratan Tata, Mukesh Ambani and Ashok Punjwani, Congress spokesperson Abhishek Manu Singhvi, and senior bureaucrats such as PMO Principal Secretary T.K.A. Nair and former Cabinet Secretary B.K. Chaturvedi. Madhya Pradesh Gas Relief Minister Babu Lal Gaur came in for special mention for a lifetime spent in betraying Bhopal victims. Aside from these, Indian Ambassador to US Mr Ronen Sen, and Planning Commission Vice-chairman also were given the Mir Zafar Award.
"Nobody has named their child Mir Zafar over the last two centuries. Our appeal to people of this nation is to shun the names of the new Mir Zafars while naming their children," Bhopal survivors' organizations said.
News clip from Kairali TV - *see fair use notice below
Organisers said the Prime Minister, through the Trade and Economic Relations Committee he heads, has taken a personal interest in the Bhopal legacy issue for all the wrong reasons. "Twenty three years of suffering of nearly half a million Bhopal victims has failed to move the Prime Minister. But he is catalysed into action at the frustration of Dow Chemical in being unable to profit from setting up polluting factories in India," said Rashida Bee, survivor and leader of the Bhopal Gas Peedit Mahila Stationery Karmachari Sangh. "Our awards ceremony may be a spoof, but the award winners will have to face our wrath," she said.
Significantly, the awards were given away by Bhopal survivors, and residents of Nandigram and Singur. Ratan Tata – played by Bhopal activist Satinath Sarangi -- received an award from a resident of Singur. The award was given to highlight his offer to lead an effort to mop up Union Carbide's toxic wastes and facilitate Dow's investments in India.
In an MP High Court case regarding clean-up of Carbide's wastes in Bhopal, the Ministry of Chemicals had filed an application seeking Rs. 100 crores from Dow Chemical following the "Polluter Pays" principle. However, files unearthed from the Prime Minister's Office using the Right to Information Act reveal that most of the award-winners are strongly pushing to exempt Dow from this principle. A note by the Cabinet Secretary dated 6 April, 2007 is categorical that given the scope for future investments in the petrochemical sector, Dow's Bhopal liabilities should be resolved out of court. "An important aim is to remove uncertainties and pave the way for promoting investments in the sector," the letter says.
Meanwhile, Congress spokesperson Adv. Abhishek Singhvi also represents Dow in the legal case in MP High Court. A letter from Dow to T.K.A. Nair refers to Dow's plans to meet Singhvi and seek his guidance. "It is shameful that the PMO is openly referring to Dow's meetings with the Congress spokesperson. Even more irregular is the fact that Singhvi's confidential legal opinion to his client Dow has found its way into the PM's files within days of it being sent to Dow," said Satinath Sarangi, a long-time Bhopal activist who acted as Ratan Tata to receive the award.
The Mir Zafar Awards will be an annual affair considering the Indian elite's penchant for perfidy. This year's ceremony was officiated by noted film and TV personality Suhasini Mulay who spoke for Dalal Foundation. Noting the impending 60th anniversary of India's freedom, she said "We, at Dalal Foundation believe that freedom is okay as long as it is recognized and respected that the freedom to exploit natural and human resources for profit generation takes precedence over all other freedoms."

The delighted winners of the Mir Zafars, 2007 take the plaudits
Rashida Bee/Champa Devi Shukla (09425688215)
Bhopal Gas Peedit Mahila Stationery Karmachari Sangh
Syed M. Irfan/Nawab Khan (09329026319)
Bhopal Gas Peedit Mahila Purush Sangarsh Morcha
Rachna Dhingra/Satinath Sarangi (09826167369)
Bhopal Group for Information and Action
For a copy of documents unearthed from PMO Files, visit:
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Posted by tim at 11:54 AM | Comments (0)
August 01, 2007
Mir Zafar awards ceremony 2007
Seems like satire but it's Real Life

*Press invitation*
Date: 11.00am, 11 August, 2007.
Venue: Triveni Kala Sangam, Conference Hall, 205. Tansen Marg (opp. FICCI auditorium), New Delhi - 110001
Mir Zafar's name has come to mean "traitor," despite the fact that he is not the only turn-coat, and possibly not the most deserving either. Infamous for his treachery at the Battle of Plassey against
his Nawab Siraj-ud-daulah – not the most endearing fellow himself – Mir Zafar and his deal with the East India Company has immortalized the penchant of some Indians to sell their country to curry favour to foreign businesses.
Following and improving on the infamous tradition of Mir Zafar, modern-day sellouts in the Indian Government and business are vying for a place in Indian history's hall of shame. Spoilt for choice,
the Awards Committee had to restrict itself to a handful – the Dirty Dozen – from among the thousands of eligibles for a place in the Mir Zafar Hall of Shame. Instituted by the survivors of the 1984 Union Carbide disaster, the Awards this year focus on those luminaries – businessmen, bureaucrats and politicians – that have had the courage to say "Enough is enough. Let's junk the rubbish about justice in Bhopal, and get on with business."
The Dirty Dozen are a handpicked few who have demonstrated that they are willing to go well beyond the call of duty to stand up for the Americans, even if it means sticking it to their country men and women.
Yes, yes, we know. Why only Bhopal? Why not Nandigram? Why not Kalinganagar? Why not the grand sellout of India's iron ore deposits to POSCO?
We have no real good reason, really, beyond the excuse that the Bhopal victims, who constitute the majority of the Awards Committee, are a busy bunch. Between running to quacks parading as Government doctors to treat their poison-racked bodies, and wasting their time collecting foul-smelling drinking water from toxin-tainted aquifers behind the abandoned Union Carbide factory, the Bhopali awards committee members have a packed schedule.
Besides, survivors' organizations have unearthed a plot to betray the Bhopal victims that goes as far as the Prime Minister's Office. They have the proof on paper -- the PMO files. Let's also remember that Bhopal saga turns 23 years old this December. In the last two decades, turn-coats of every hue have fed off the misery in Bhopal. Nandigram, Singur and other areas of conflict are recent. The list of traitors in these areas is thankfully short.
But wait. Nandigram, POSCO and Kalinganagar – The Awards Ceremony does recognize the stature of these betrayals. The Awards will be given away by victims of state violence from some of these areas of conflict.

Almost exactly 250 years to the day before the PMO files come to light, Mir Zafar genuflects before his paymaster Robert Clive...
Posted by tim at 06:17 PM | Comments (0)