|

|
|

Pond’s
Hindustan Lever Ltd Ex-Mercury Employees Welfare Association Thiraviyam
Complex, Kamarajar Road, Moonjikal, Kodaikanal – 1
Ex-workers Mark 5 Years of
Struggle Against HLL
March 5 2006, KODAIKANAL -- More
than 300 people demonstrated today to mark the 5th anniversary of the
struggle for environmental clean-up and health rehabilitation against
Hindustan Lever Ltd, whose mercury thermometer factory was exposed in 2001
to have caused widespread pollution within and outside its factory. The
workers said a recently approved proposal to allow Hindustan Lever to
decontaminate its machinery once again goes against science and established
practice and puts workers in harm’s way. The plan, approved by the
Supreme Court Monitoring Committee and NEERI, will use mercury detectors
that are not sensitive enough to detect harmful levels of mercury. Also,
contrary to established practice, workers will only be given cotton gloves
which are considered inappropriate for use with mercury because mercury
penetrates cotton to reach the skin. A well-orchestrated expose by
ex-workers and Kodai residents on March 7, 2001, revealed that HLL had
dumped more than 7 tons of mercury waste in a scrapyard in town, and in the
shola forests behind the factory. The factory was closed the same year.
Protestors
today also expressed solidarity with survivors of the 1984 Union Carbide
disaster. The Bhopalis are currently on an 800-km Padayatra from
Bhopal to New Delhi demanding clean water, clean environment, and medical
and economic rehabilitation. The march began on 20 February and is expected
to reach New Delhi around March 25. “We are also demonstrating in
solidarity with the Bhopal to Delhi Padayatra. In Bhopal, as in Kodaikanal,
the Government and the Polluter have colluded to deny victims what is
legally due to them,” the Pond’s HLL ex-Employees Welfare
Association said. The protestors, mainly ex-workers from HLL and their
families, say many workers and their families are suffering from a variety
of ailments caused by mercury exposure.
They
have condemned the Supreme Court Monitoring Committee on Hazardous Wastes
and the Tamilnadu Pollution Control Board for approving unscientific,
unsafe and demonstrably inadequate decontamination procedures, and allowing
the entire operation to happen without public involvement in contravention
with the SCMC’s own recommendations and the Supreme Court’s
orders. In August 2005, the SCMC emphasized involving the Local Area
Environment Committee set up by it in assessing the project and feasibility
reports for decontamination of plant, machinery and HLL premises. However,
on 21 February, in response to a Writ Petition filed against the ad hoc
machinery decontamination begun by HLL, the SCMC Chairman said that the
local people need not be involved.
Last
month, the Madras High Court admitted a petition by ex-workers seeking
medical rehabilitation and compensation for health damages sustained by
them and their family members as a result of exposure to mercury. Skin and
nervous disorders, kidney failures, dental problems and tumours are common
symptoms among ex-workers and their families. “Hindustan Lever is
like Union Carbide when it comes to avoiding liability and downplaying
toxic hazards,” the ex-Employees Association said.
Issued
from Chennai on behalf of Pond’s HLL Ex-Mercury Employees Welfare
Association by:
Corporate Accountability Desk, H19/4 Gangai
Street, Kalakshetra Colony, Chennai 600 090
For
more details contact:
For
more information, contact: Mahendra Babu: +91 9443828569
Read related
media story
New Kerala 06 March, 2006
Fair
Use Statement
|