|
"Rajkumar Keswani" (born Bhopal, India) is a senior journalist. Keswani was the first journalist to bring attention to the safety lapses and impending Bhopal disaster that eventually came to pass at the town's Union Carbide pesticides plant over night on December 2–3, 1984. Keswani had written several articles, from 1982 through 1984, detailing that safety standards at the plant were inadequate and that a catastrophic leak could result. Rajkumar began to take an interest in the affairs of the Union Carbide Bhopal India plant in 1981 when Mohammad Ashraf his friend who also was a plant employee, spoke of possible dangers posed by leaks and died in an accident at the plant on 24 December 1981 after inhaling phosgene. For internal information sources Rajkumar found two persons who were fired - Bashirullah and Shankar Malvia who helped him to get hold of all manuals and confidential reports, it took Rajkumar nine months to write his first piece in 1982. == Raising alarm about the disaster == Reports of Safety lapses in the plant had started surfacing in 1981 three years before the disaster when a minor gas leak killed an employee inside the plant. Rajkumar first wrote about inadequate safety standards on Sept. 26, 1982 with a title “ Save Please, This City” in a small weekly paper Rapat. He repeated the warning in two follow-up articles on Oct. 1- "Bhopal sitting on the brink of a volcano" and on Oct. 8-‘If you don’t understand, all will end’ that year. On Oct. 5, four days after the second article, 18 people at the Union Carbide plant were exposed to a mixture of chloroform, methyl isocyanate and hydrochloric acid from a leaking valve. None was seriously harmed. In the article ""Bhopal: On the Brink of a Disaster”,〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=https://zcomm.org/zmagazine/the-verdict-in-bhopal-by-john-raymond/ )〕 Rajkumar reported on a series of incidents that had taken place and asserted that the leak on Oct. 5, 1982 had affected thousands of residents of neighboring slum districts who fled in fear and returned only after eight hours. Request to Move Plant Cited Rajkumar also asserted in the article that in 1975, M. N. Buch, an Indian bureaucrat, had asked Union Carbide to move the plant away from its present site because of the rapid growth of residential neighborhoods around it. Union carbide were lucky because Mr. Buch was transferred from his post. Rajkumar reported a Telex exchange about Union carbide India works manager named J Mukund (one of the accused who was convicted on June 7) sent asking for advice about coating the pipes and the US-based parent company sent him a message saying that the best material for piping would be too expensive and too difficult to acquire. and highlighting how Union Carbide, USA escape their responsibility when they were advising Bhopal to economise on safety measures and instructed Bhopal to use cheaper material. They were advising it to compromise on safety. Mukund's message was sent on August 27, 1984. Just a few weeks before the fateful leak. Rajkumar a journalist, not an engineer,knew nothing about the composition of chemicals or their behaviour. His conviction that the Union Carbide Bhopal plant was headed for disaster grew out of two small pieces of information that he happened to read independently. One was in a Union Carbide report that mentioned in passing that several of the gasses that MIC broke down into, such as phosgene, were “heavier than air.” Reference to phosgene caught his eye while reading an article on WWII; it had been one of the chemicals used in the German gas chambers. With these two incidental pieces of information, Rajkumar launched an investigation that convinced him that Bhopal was on the road to certain tragedy.In spite of the shrillness of his warnings, no one paid him any attention. Even his friends thought he was crazy. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Rajkumar Keswani」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|