Delhi-based Centre for Science and Environment (CSE), which organised a public meeting to commemorate the tragedy, stressed on the need to strengthen institutions instead of making new ones that add to "multiplicity and confusion" to prevent such disasters from happening again.
"To prevent Bhopal 2.0...The first thing that must be done is strengthening of the institutions. We need to fix what is broken, and not make new institutions that add to multiplicity and confusion.
Noting that Bhopal must "never" be forgotten, CSE said Dow Chemical must be held liable for the toxic waste still present in the abandoned factory and it must pay for the plant site's remediation which must be done quickly before toxins spread more poison, travelling through groundwater into people's bodies.
"Systems of corporate liability cannot remain inadequate as high-risk and unknown technologies pose new challenges. Only then will powerful companies worry about the implications of their actions on tomorrow's generations.
CSE said that even if there has not been such a tragedy like that again, "the country continues to have many mini-Bhopals - industrial accidents, which take lives and throw up a huge challenge of hazardous waste contamination".
