Categories: OPINION

Forty Years After Bhopal Gas Tragedy: Why India’s Constitutional Ethos Still Fails Labour and Environmental Rights

Keywords:

Bhopal Gas Tragedy, Constitutional Ethos, Labour Rights, Environmental Justice, Corporate Accountability, Ease of Doing Business, Industrial Disasters, Constitution Day.

As India commemorates Constitution Day in 2024 and approaches the 40th anniversary of the Bhopal Gas Tragedy, the haunting memories of the world’s worst industrial disaster demand deep reflection. On the night of December 2-3, 1984, a toxic leak of methyl isocyanate gas from Union Carbide’s plant in Bhopal killed thousands and left hundreds of thousands with lifelong ailments. Yet, forty years later, the lessons of this catastrophe seem glaringly absent from India’s constitutional and legal framework, raising troubling questions about the government’s commitment to safeguarding labour rights, environmental justice, and corporate accountability.

The Tragedy That Defined Corporate Negligence

The Bhopal Gas Tragedy symbolized the catastrophic failure of corporate responsibility and government oversight. It exposed the stark vulnerability of India’s labour force, the exploitation of its lax environmental regulations, and the impunity enjoyed by multinational corporations operating in developing countries. Yet, the systemic failures that led to the disaster remain largely unaddressed, leaving workers and communities susceptible to similar hazards.

The Union Carbide Corporation (UCC), now a subsidiary of Dow Chemical Company, escaped meaningful accountability. Despite international legal efforts, the compensation awarded to victims was grossly inadequate, and successive Indian governments failed to secure justice for survivors. The tragedy revealed not only the deficiencies of India’s regulatory framework but also its inability to hold corporations accountable for transnational industrial crimes.

Labour and Environmental Rights: A Forgotten Constitutional Mandate

The Indian Constitution is unequivocal in its commitment to social and economic justice. Article 21 guarantees the right to life, Article 48A mandates the protection of the environment, and Article 42 calls for the safeguarding of just and humane conditions of work. Yet, four decades after Bhopal, the government’s actions have often stood in direct violation of these principles.

Instead of learning from Bhopal, successive governments have aggressively pushed the agenda of ‘ease of doing business’, diluting labour laws and environmental regulations in the process. Policies such as the 2020 Labour Codes and the streamlining of environmental clearances have prioritized economic growth over worker welfare and ecological sustainability. For instance, the 2020 Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) notification faced severe criticism for weakening public consultation requirements and granting post-facto environmental clearances.

This pro-business approach stands in stark contrast to the constitutional vision of protecting the marginalized, ensuring human dignity, and preserving the ecological balance. By failing to address the structural gaps that allowed Bhopal to happen, India risks repeating history.

The Lingering Suffering of Survivors

Four decades on, the survivors of the Bhopal Gas Tragedy continue to endure untold suffering. Chronic illnesses such as cancer, respiratory disorders, reproductive health issues, and mental trauma plague affected families. Worse, the mutagenic effects of the disaster have led to intergenerational harm, with children born decades after the incident still facing disabilities and health challenges.

Despite repeated assurances, victims have not received adequate compensation, healthcare, or rehabilitation. The Bhopal Gas Peedith Mahila Udyog Sangathan (BGPMUS) and other advocacy groups have repeatedly flagged the lack of government support, but to little avail.

Corporate Accountability: A Legal Void

One of the most glaring lessons of the Bhopal disaster is the absence of a robust legal framework on corporate accountability for industrial accidents. India still lacks a comprehensive law to address corporate liability in cases of mass harm, leaving workers and communities vulnerable to exploitation and negligence.

The Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act, 2010, introduced in response to international pressure after the Bhopal Tragedy, provides a limited model for corporate accountability in the nuclear sector. However, there is no equivalent legislation for other industrial sectors, and existing laws such as the Factories Act, 1948 and the Environment Protection Act, 1986 remain insufficient to address the complexities of modern corporate crimes.

Moreover, multinational corporations operating in India continue to benefit from legal impunity, with weak enforcement mechanisms and pro-business arbitration clauses in international trade agreements often tipping the scales in their favour.

Reflections on Constitution Day

As India celebrates its constitutional values, the unresolved legacy of the Bhopal Gas Tragedy highlights a troubling dissonance between the spirit of the Constitution and the government’s policy priorities. The tragedy serves as a grim reminder that economic growth cannot come at the cost of human rights, environmental justice, and public safety.

To honor the spirit of Constitution Day and ensure that Bhopal’s lessons are not forgotten, India must take bold steps to:

  • Strengthen Labour and Environmental Laws: Revisit the diluted provisions of the Labour Codes and environmental regulations to prioritize worker welfare and ecological balance.
  • Legislate Corporate Accountability: Enact a comprehensive legal framework to hold corporations accountable for industrial disasters, ensuring adequate compensation and deterrence.
  • Prioritize Victim Rehabilitation: Establish mechanisms to provide timely and adequate compensation, healthcare, and livelihood support to survivors of industrial accidents.
  • Enhance Regulatory Oversight: Invest in strengthening institutions such as the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) and local authorities to ensure strict compliance with safety and environmental norms.
  • Promote Public Awareness: Make the study of industrial disasters like Bhopal a part of school and university curricula to ensure collective memory and accountability.

Conclusion

Forty years after the Bhopal Gas Tragedy, the failure to incorporate its lessons into India’s constitutional ethos represents a collective shortcoming. As the nation reflects on its constitutional values this Constitution Day, it must renew its commitment to protecting the rights of its most vulnerable citizens and preventing the recurrence of such devastating tragedies. The Bhopal Gas Tragedy should no longer remain a forgotten footnote, but a rallying cry for justice, accountability, and reform.

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Ashutosh Dubey

legal journalist,Public Affair Advisor AND Founding Editor - kanishksocialmedia-BROADCASTING MEDIA PRODUCTION COMPANY,LEGAL PUBLISHER

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