It took over 10 days of fevered media chasing around the bushes before someone did the obvious: ask the man who was at the centre of the action about what really happened. Once Karan Thapar had got MK Rasgotra, foreign secretary at the time of the Bhopal disaster, to recount how Warren Anderson came to India and why he was allowed to go back, much of the competitive shouting by TV anchors over their respective ‘breaking news’ was exposed as needless excitement over a simple and straightforward story.
This fairly simple sequence answered all the questions: why was
After all, no other director of Union Carbide Corporation was ever charged with any crime, or sought to be extradited. Nor, for that matter, was any non-executive director of Union Carbide
Set this straightforward story against the frenzy over
And there was much clamour for Arjun Singh to come clean (a TV reporter told the camera from outside Singh's residence that he went there three times a day in the hope that Singh would say something--not a great ad for choosing TV reporting as a career!). With little thought for the TV reporter's joys and frustrations, the then chief minister of Madhya Pradesh maintained his sphinx-like silence, and it was left to ever-useful Pranab Mukherjee to come up with the unconvincing line that
All the dissembling and denying, it turned out, was quite unnecessary. If the government promised safe passage, it would be unthinkable for it to renege on its promise, or its international credibility would be mud. And if it did not promise safe passage
The real issues therefore got pushed into the shadows, while the spotlight stayed on
1. How and why did the government agree to settle for an eighth of the compensation it had initially demanded from Carbide? No questions asked, and so no answers given.
2. Why was even this absurd sum not distributed promptly among the victims? No questions, and no answers.
3. How and why did the Supreme Court do what it did, in reducing the charge to a less serious one? Ahmadi was questioned by Barkha Dutt, he came out with carefully bland answers, and it was left to her to expose the then Chief Justice by getting the then CBI director, Madhavan, on the same show to tell it like it was.
4. And why, after 25 years, had the government not done its basic duty by the
That these were the real issues became clear towards the end, as the new group of ministers got down to work on precisely the issue of relief and rehabilitation. Ministers who might have been in the dock for the post-Bhopal scandals of betrayal and neglect, could get away scot free while the Congress and the government got exercised about protecting Rajiv’s fair name on a non-existent charge.
Not to worry, though. The TV news channels got their required quota of a scandal per week, and they milked it for all it was worth, so that the the eyeballs stayed glued.
Next week, there will be another scandal to rant about.