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Thursday, 26 July 2012
Thursday, 19 July 2012
Don't poison our Olympics
In 1984, between 7,000 and 10,000 people were killed immediately by a
toxic gas leak from a pesticide factory in Bhopal. Over the next 20 years a
further 15,000 people died and the site is still contaminated, affecting the
human rights of over 100,000 people.
Today Dow Chemical, a sponsor of this year’s Olympic Games, owns the
company responsible for the leak. However, it has never addressed the on-going
human rights impact of the catastrophe. Find out more here.
A unique
exhibition is opening today, 19 July, at Amnesty International’s UK offices in Shoreditch, East London, to highlight the Olympics
link to Dow Chemical, a sponsor of this year’s games. The
multi-sensory art installation on Bhopal by acclaimed Indian artist Samar Jodha is open until the end
of July.
Samar
Jodha’s temperature-controlled metal container recreates the wintry night of
the 2 December 1984 in Bhopal, with 3D images, blow-torched mannequins and a
soundscape. The soundscape starts silently, and there are notably no alarms or
sirens throughout, as on the night, just the noise of crickets and the hum of
the factory. The sound of gas escaping from the factory can be heard as the
viewer moves through the container and towards the end of the journey, the
sound of the first Bhopal victim struggling to breath.
Born in
Jodhpur, India, Jodha has relatives in Bhopal including an uncle who worked at
the chemical plant and another who was a doctor. Jodha believes the
installation will help prevent "the constant struggle of memory against
forgetting."
Renowned London street artist Pure Evil, has also painted a sign on the
Amnesty building, which reads: ‘Don’t Poison our Olympics; Tell Lord Coe to
stop defending Dow.’
Amnesty is asking the public to contact Lord Coe, the head of the
committee organising the London Olympic Games, (LOCOG) to ask him to retract
his committee’s defence of Dow Chemical and to apologise to Bhopal's survivors. Apparently, Seb Coe has responded by blocking
the email service the organization uses, but you can still email Lord Coe directly from your own email address. Click here for more information.
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