In a joint press conference here, one of the five NGOs said the PM's action of "pleading" with Dow Chemical CEO Andrew Liveris to invest more in India is "outrageous and disgusting" for citizens.
"Instead of making Dow Chemical obey Indian laws, the Prime Minister chose to offer a lavish dinner to its CEO Andrew Liveris during his visit to US this September," said Rashida Bee, head of Bhopal Gas Peedit Manila Stationery Karmchari Sangh.
Union Carbide Corporation has been a wholly-owned subsidiary of Dow Chemical Company since 2001.
Rashida said, "The Union Carbide has been absconding for last 23 years from charges of culpable homicide and other serious offences related to the toxic gas release from now-defunct Union Carbide factory on the intervening night of December 2-3 in 1984 here, that killed 25,000 people and injured half a million others".
"In the photo available at the @PMO twitter handle, Liveris is seen smiling in the front row along with Prime Minister Modi. If this is not an invitation to 'Make more Bhopals in India' (then) we do not know what it is?" he said.
Nawab Khan, who heads Bhopal Gas Peedit Mahila Purush Sangharsh Morcha, said Dow Chemical was defying the Indian justice system.
Information and Action, claimed that the notices against Dow Chemical were issued by the Bhopal district court due to intervention by his organisation and not due to persuation by the probe agency CBI.
"Tomorrow, we will see whether the CBI helplessly watches Dow Chemical ignoring the court's order a third time, or whether it summons the courage to take effective legal action against the criminal corporation," he said.
Safreen Khan, president of Children against Dow Carbide said, "We hope our Prime Minister will instruct CBI to go hard against this criminal company that is sheltering the killer Carbide. This way he can also prove that he is not all that the chief minister of Delhi says he is".
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