India Together: A committee to exonerate industry? - 31 August 2013
   
    31 August 2013 - 
From 1979, the chemical endosulfan began to be extensively sprayed 
aerially in the cashew plantations of the Plantation Corporation of 
Kerala (PCK) spread over 
2209 hectares in various divisions of Kasargod district in Kerala. Soon 
after, reports of unusual health disorders started coming in from 
villages like Vaninagar, 
Adur, Mulleria, Padre, and Kallar. Disorders of the central nervous 
system, cerebral palsy, mental and physical retardation, epilepsy and 
congenital anomalies 
became very common in the region.
  31 August 2013 - 
From 1979, the chemical endosulfan began to be extensively sprayed 
aerially in the cashew plantations of the Plantation Corporation of 
Kerala (PCK) spread over 
2209 hectares in various divisions of Kasargod district in Kerala. Soon 
after, reports of unusual health disorders started coming in from 
villages like Vaninagar, 
Adur, Mulleria, Padre, and Kallar. Disorders of the central nervous 
system, cerebral palsy, mental and physical retardation, epilepsy and 
congenital anomalies 
became very common in the region.
  
  
     
   
   
   However, instead of directly constituting a tribunal, the government 
constituted a committee with retired high court judge C N Ramachandran 
Nair as chairman and 
the Director General of Prosecution and the Law Secretary to the 
government as members. The task of the committee was to "report on the 
need to constitute a 
tribunal to settle claims of endosulfan victims of Kasargod and also to 
examine the possibility of recovering compensation from Plantation 
Corporation and 
endosulfan companies."
  
However, instead of directly constituting a tribunal, the government 
constituted a committee with retired high court judge C N Ramachandran 
Nair as chairman and 
the Director General of Prosecution and the Law Secretary to the 
government as members. The task of the committee was to "report on the 
need to constitute a 
tribunal to settle claims of endosulfan victims of Kasargod and also to 
examine the possibility of recovering compensation from Plantation 
Corporation and 
endosulfan companies."
   
    31 August 2013 - 
From 1979, the chemical endosulfan began to be extensively sprayed 
aerially in the cashew plantations of the Plantation Corporation of 
Kerala (PCK) spread over 
2209 hectares in various divisions of Kasargod district in Kerala. Soon 
after, reports of unusual health disorders started coming in from 
villages like Vaninagar, 
Adur, Mulleria, Padre, and Kallar. Disorders of the central nervous 
system, cerebral palsy, mental and physical retardation, epilepsy and 
congenital anomalies 
became very common in the region.
  31 August 2013 - 
From 1979, the chemical endosulfan began to be extensively sprayed 
aerially in the cashew plantations of the Plantation Corporation of 
Kerala (PCK) spread over 
2209 hectares in various divisions of Kasargod district in Kerala. Soon 
after, reports of unusual health disorders started coming in from 
villages like Vaninagar, 
Adur, Mulleria, Padre, and Kallar. Disorders of the central nervous 
system, cerebral palsy, mental and physical retardation, epilepsy and 
congenital anomalies 
became very common in the region.
  
  
     
   
   
   However, instead of directly constituting a tribunal, the government 
constituted a committee with retired high court judge C N Ramachandran 
Nair as chairman and 
the Director General of Prosecution and the Law Secretary to the 
government as members. The task of the committee was to "report on the 
need to constitute a 
tribunal to settle claims of endosulfan victims of Kasargod and also to 
examine the possibility of recovering compensation from Plantation 
Corporation and 
endosulfan companies."
  
However, instead of directly constituting a tribunal, the government 
constituted a committee with retired high court judge C N Ramachandran 
Nair as chairman and 
the Director General of Prosecution and the Law Secretary to the 
government as members. The task of the committee was to "report on the 
need to constitute a 
tribunal to settle claims of endosulfan victims of Kasargod and also to 
examine the possibility of recovering compensation from Plantation 
Corporation and 
endosulfan companies."
 
                                 
      31 August 2013 -   From 1979, the chemical endosulfan began to be extensively sprayed  aerially in the cashew plantations of the Plantation Corporation of  Kerala (PCK) spread over  2209 hectares in various divisions of Kasargod district in Kerala. Soon  after, reports of unusual health disorders started coming in from  villages like Vaninagar,  Adur, Mulleria, Padre, and Kallar. Disorders of the central nervous  system, cerebral palsy, mental and physical retardation, epilepsy and  congenital anomalies  became very common in the region.
     31 August 2013 -   From 1979, the chemical endosulfan began to be extensively sprayed  aerially in the cashew plantations of the Plantation Corporation of  Kerala (PCK) spread over  2209 hectares in various divisions of Kasargod district in Kerala. Soon  after, reports of unusual health disorders started coming in from  villages like Vaninagar,  Adur, Mulleria, Padre, and Kallar. Disorders of the central nervous  system, cerebral palsy, mental and physical retardation, epilepsy and  congenital anomalies  became very common in the region.  
                  
     However, instead of directly constituting a tribunal, the government  constituted a committee with retired high court judge C N Ramachandran  Nair as chairman and  the Director General of Prosecution and the Law Secretary to the  government as members. The task of the committee was to "report on the  need to constitute a  tribunal to settle claims of endosulfan victims of Kasargod and also to  examine the possibility of recovering compensation from Plantation  Corporation and  endosulfan companies."
      However, instead of directly constituting a tribunal, the government  constituted a committee with retired high court judge C N Ramachandran  Nair as chairman and  the Director General of Prosecution and the Law Secretary to the  government as members. The task of the committee was to "report on the  need to constitute a  tribunal to settle claims of endosulfan victims of Kasargod and also to  examine the possibility of recovering compensation from Plantation  Corporation and  endosulfan companies."  
ENDOSULFAN VICTIMS
  
  
A committee to exonerate industry?
The recommendations of the committee constituted to look into the claims of endosulfan victims in Kasargod and decide on the need to set up a tribunal to settle those, appear to be largely sympathetic towards the Plantation Corporation and endosulfan manufacturers. P N Venugopal reports.
  
   
  
  
  
      
   
A committee to exonerate industry?
The recommendations of the committee constituted to look into the claims of endosulfan victims in Kasargod and decide on the need to set up a tribunal to settle those, appear to be largely sympathetic towards the Plantation Corporation and endosulfan manufacturers. P N Venugopal reports.
 
  
  | 
 | 
 31 August 2013 - 
From 1979, the chemical endosulfan began to be extensively sprayed 
aerially in the cashew plantations of the Plantation Corporation of 
Kerala (PCK) spread over 
2209 hectares in various divisions of Kasargod district in Kerala. Soon 
after, reports of unusual health disorders started coming in from 
villages like Vaninagar, 
Adur, Mulleria, Padre, and Kallar. Disorders of the central nervous 
system, cerebral palsy, mental and physical retardation, epilepsy and 
congenital anomalies 
became very common in the region.
  31 August 2013 - 
From 1979, the chemical endosulfan began to be extensively sprayed 
aerially in the cashew plantations of the Plantation Corporation of 
Kerala (PCK) spread over 
2209 hectares in various divisions of Kasargod district in Kerala. Soon 
after, reports of unusual health disorders started coming in from 
villages like Vaninagar, 
Adur, Mulleria, Padre, and Kallar. Disorders of the central nervous 
system, cerebral palsy, mental and physical retardation, epilepsy and 
congenital anomalies 
became very common in the region.
There were also many cases of liver cancer, blood cancer, infertility, 
miscarriage, hormonal imbalance, skin diseases and asthma. Around a 
thousand people died, 
more than 2300 are even today either bed-ridden or require assistance 
for living, and at least 1600 others are suffering from less 
debilitating ailments. The list 
is also ever expanding. Thanal, an NGO involved in research and 
rehabilitation in the area, estimates the final figure of affected 
persons to be between 8000 to 
10,000.
  
Starting with Dr Y S Mohankumar, who was the first to link the spraying 
of endosulfan to the unnatural disorders that gradually enveloped a 
large community, a 
whole generation of social/health workers and voluntary organisations 
have involved themselves in the palliative care and rehabilitation of 
endosulfan victims. It 
is due to their incessant interventions and agitation, which included 
fasts, conventions, awareness camps and the like, that the victims are 
getting some succour. 
Successive governments, regardless of the combination of parties in 
power, remained mulish and unmoved for a large part of the last three 
decades. It was only in 
2008 that the Kerala  government owned up to some responsibility in the 
matter, when V S Achutanandan, Chief Minister at the time, distributed 
relief amounts to 
the next of kin of 135 deceased victims.
 
By this time, the clamour was loud and clear that the victims, both the 
dead and the living-dead, had to be paid compensation. It was seen as a 
right and as the 
only way to set right a massive wrong. There were several factors 
ranging from money to manpower that had deterred many victims or their 
relatives from going to 
the civil court earlier. More discouraging was the bitter experiences of
 those who had approached the courts as well as the time that had 
lapsed, making most of 
the appeals barred by the statutes of limitation. It was in this 
background that a demand for setting up of a tribunal gathered strength.
  
"The people of Kasargod and the activists expected those responsible for
 the tragedy, be it the PCK, the endosulfan manufacturers or 
institutions like the 
agricultural university which gave the wrong advice, to be fixed by the 
tribunal," says Jayakumar of Thanal. And a tribunal would help to avoid 
all the cumbersome 
delays and expenditure of claiming compensation by approaching a civil 
court. 
| 
 | 
 However, instead of directly constituting a tribunal, the government 
constituted a committee with retired high court judge C N Ramachandran 
Nair as chairman and 
the Director General of Prosecution and the Law Secretary to the 
government as members. The task of the committee was to "report on the 
need to constitute a 
tribunal to settle claims of endosulfan victims of Kasargod and also to 
examine the possibility of recovering compensation from Plantation 
Corporation and 
endosulfan companies."
  
However, instead of directly constituting a tribunal, the government 
constituted a committee with retired high court judge C N Ramachandran 
Nair as chairman and 
the Director General of Prosecution and the Law Secretary to the 
government as members. The task of the committee was to "report on the 
need to constitute a 
tribunal to settle claims of endosulfan victims of Kasargod and also to 
examine the possibility of recovering compensation from Plantation 
Corporation and 
endosulfan companies."
Committee report
Even as the committee recommended the setting up of a single judge 
tribunal, it had altogether different ideas about the terms of 
reference. "We have to state 
that the existing law of the country permits any victim to proceed in 
tort against the plantation company and if required against endosulfan 
manufacturers and 
suppliers before a civil court to claim damages," says the committee 
report. "On the other hand, victims have received compensation in part 
and are receiving 
monthly pension, ration, medical, education and other assistance 
rendered by the government as part of the implementation of the 
recommendations of the NHRC." 
The latter statement relates to the report dated 31 December 2010 from 
the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) that had recommended 
'solacium' to the victims 
upto a maximum of five lakh rupees. The total amount required for this, 
Rs.120 crores was to be shared equally by the PCK and the government. 
PCK had paid Rs 
27.40 crores in May 2012. Since the plantation company is already paying
 an amount, the committee seems to be emphatic that the proposed 
tribunal should not 
entertain any litigation against the corporation seeking further 
compensation.
 
Activist and writer M A Rehman points out that what the NHRC had 
recommended was 'solacium' and not 'compensation'. Solacium is only 
interim relief. Dr Asheel, 
Nodal Officer, Endosulfan Rehabilitation explains how the compensation 
should be arrived at in such cases: "If a child is crippled or becomes 
mentally retarded, 
the compensation should be based on what the child lost in his or her 
future life due to the spraying of endosulfan." It cannot even be 
likened to insurance 
payment to the victim of a road accident, because in that case, 
negligence could be alleged on the part of the victim. "But here the 
innocents were inside their 
homes."
 
The committee also goes on to protect the endosulfan companies from 
being brought under the scanner of the proposed tribunal on the argument
 that these companies 
were given a licence to produce the chemical under the Insecticides Act 
of the central government. Thus they are most likely to be exonerated on
 the grounds that 
their actions were legal in nature. In this context, Dr Asheel however 
points out that studies as early as 1979 had warned about the 
deleterious effects of the 
pesticide and hence, no one can shun responsibility. The approach of the
 committee thus appears to be almost akin to exonerating the 
perpetrators.
 
Having poured water over the two burning issues of the victims, the 
committee addresses the source of funds for future and seems to be clear
 that the liability to 
pay compensation should be taken over by the government. It can however 
'expect' contribution from the central government, banks and other 
public undertakings, 
the plantation corporation and the endosulfan manufacturers like 
Hindustan Insecticides Ltd. It should be noted, however, that 
contributions by the latter parties 
are viewed as voluntary charity and also that the corporation and the 
insecticide manufacturers are placed on par with financial institutions 
that had nothing to 
do with the whole episode.
 
The biggest let-down in the committee's report perhaps lies in the fact 
that it has sought to put a ceiling on the compensation to be 
adjudicated by the tribunal. 
NHRC had fixed a maximum amount for various types of disabilities, the 
highest being five lakh rupees. The committee says that the total amount
 received by a 
victim, including the amount that the tribunal may decide to award him, 
should not exceed the ceiling prescribed by NHRC.
 
Identifying victims
That practically leaves only one job for the tribunal. Eliminate and 
include. There are allegations that a few are getting solacium or 
pension even though they 
are not endosulfan victims. The 'Plantation Protection Samithi' - an 
organisation of workers of the PCK keen to protect their livelihoods - 
has alleged that even 
those who fell down from the coconut tree or those who suffer from 
working in hazardous conditions in the Gulf countries have now become 
beneficiaries. On the 
other hand, P K Sudheerbabu, Deputy Collector, Endosulfan Victims Relief
 Cell says that the names of 28 among the dead have not been included in
 the list of the 
endosulfan victims due to the disputes raised by the Samithi.
 
And then, there is the question of inclusion. Exclusion or inclusion is 
at present being decided through a series of screenings, starting at the
 Primary Health 
Centre and concluding with a medical board comprised of experts from all
 specialities. Is there a need for a judicial review of the medical 
adjudication is the 
moot question.
Also, given the fact that the time taken for endosulfan to break down 
into the soil is six years, and aerial spraying was halted only in 2000,
 are there 
possibilities of new victims? Dr Asheel says there are no chances of 
further contamination due to environmental reasons. "Now in Kasagod, 
endosulfan is found only 
in human blood and human fat."  He, however, explains that a girl who 
has been exposed to endosulfan during the reproductive period of her 
life, could cause 
symptoms in her child. So, genetic or perinatal reasons may persist. 
A clouded future
Jayakumar also raises the issues of social rehabilitation, environmental
 rehabilitation and rejuvenation that a properly assigned tribunal could
 look into. "More 
than the compensation, I'm concerned about the fate of hundreds of 
children who are now 17 or 18; those who cannot manage their daily life 
without assistance," 
says Vigneswara Bhat, president of Kallar panchayat. "Now their parents 
or someone else is there to take care of them. But what happens when the
 parents or 
caregivers die?" 
Bhat says there are hundreds of such children in Kasargod district whose
 future hangs in the balance. The tribunal should be able to do 
something to help them, he 
feels. He is also hopeful of an effective and helpful tribunal being set
 up, despite the restrictive report presented by the Justice 
Ramachandran Committee.
 
It is difficult, however, to share the optimism of the panchayat 
president if you scan the checkered history of endosulfan victims in 
Kasargod. Every opportunity 
has been used by the establishment for prevarication, postponement, 
inaction and abdication of responsibility. A report of this kind with an
 aura of judicial 
respectability can always be highlighted as one more convenient excuse.
  
- See more at: http://indiatogether.org/2013/aug/env-endosulfn.htm#sthash.C8EBQJ28.Rm2p6wmX.dpuf
ENDOSULFAN VICTIMS
  
  
A committee to exonerate industry?
The recommendations of the committee constituted to look into the claims of endosulfan victims in Kasargod and decide on the need to set up a tribunal to settle those, appear to be largely sympathetic towards the Plantation Corporation and endosulfan manufacturers. P N Venugopal reports.
  
   
  
  
  
      
   
A committee to exonerate industry?
The recommendations of the committee constituted to look into the claims of endosulfan victims in Kasargod and decide on the need to set up a tribunal to settle those, appear to be largely sympathetic towards the Plantation Corporation and endosulfan manufacturers. P N Venugopal reports.
 
  
  | 
 | 
 31 August 2013 - 
From 1979, the chemical endosulfan began to be extensively sprayed 
aerially in the cashew plantations of the Plantation Corporation of 
Kerala (PCK) spread over 
2209 hectares in various divisions of Kasargod district in Kerala. Soon 
after, reports of unusual health disorders started coming in from 
villages like Vaninagar, 
Adur, Mulleria, Padre, and Kallar. Disorders of the central nervous 
system, cerebral palsy, mental and physical retardation, epilepsy and 
congenital anomalies 
became very common in the region.
  31 August 2013 - 
From 1979, the chemical endosulfan began to be extensively sprayed 
aerially in the cashew plantations of the Plantation Corporation of 
Kerala (PCK) spread over 
2209 hectares in various divisions of Kasargod district in Kerala. Soon 
after, reports of unusual health disorders started coming in from 
villages like Vaninagar, 
Adur, Mulleria, Padre, and Kallar. Disorders of the central nervous 
system, cerebral palsy, mental and physical retardation, epilepsy and 
congenital anomalies 
became very common in the region.
There were also many cases of liver cancer, blood cancer, infertility, 
miscarriage, hormonal imbalance, skin diseases and asthma. Around a 
thousand people died, 
more than 2300 are even today either bed-ridden or require assistance 
for living, and at least 1600 others are suffering from less 
debilitating ailments. The list 
is also ever expanding. Thanal, an NGO involved in research and 
rehabilitation in the area, estimates the final figure of affected 
persons to be between 8000 to 
10,000.
  
Starting with Dr Y S Mohankumar, who was the first to link the spraying 
of endosulfan to the unnatural disorders that gradually enveloped a 
large community, a 
whole generation of social/health workers and voluntary organisations 
have involved themselves in the palliative care and rehabilitation of 
endosulfan victims. It 
is due to their incessant interventions and agitation, which included 
fasts, conventions, awareness camps and the like, that the victims are 
getting some succour. 
Successive governments, regardless of the combination of parties in 
power, remained mulish and unmoved for a large part of the last three 
decades. It was only in 
2008 that the Kerala  government owned up to some responsibility in the 
matter, when V S Achutanandan, Chief Minister at the time, distributed 
relief amounts to 
the next of kin of 135 deceased victims.
 
By this time, the clamour was loud and clear that the victims, both the 
dead and the living-dead, had to be paid compensation. It was seen as a 
right and as the 
only way to set right a massive wrong. There were several factors 
ranging from money to manpower that had deterred many victims or their 
relatives from going to 
the civil court earlier. More discouraging was the bitter experiences of
 those who had approached the courts as well as the time that had 
lapsed, making most of 
the appeals barred by the statutes of limitation. It was in this 
background that a demand for setting up of a tribunal gathered strength.
  
"The people of Kasargod and the activists expected those responsible for
 the tragedy, be it the PCK, the endosulfan manufacturers or 
institutions like the 
agricultural university which gave the wrong advice, to be fixed by the 
tribunal," says Jayakumar of Thanal. And a tribunal would help to avoid 
all the cumbersome 
delays and expenditure of claiming compensation by approaching a civil 
court. 
| 
 | 
 However, instead of directly constituting a tribunal, the government 
constituted a committee with retired high court judge C N Ramachandran 
Nair as chairman and 
the Director General of Prosecution and the Law Secretary to the 
government as members. The task of the committee was to "report on the 
need to constitute a 
tribunal to settle claims of endosulfan victims of Kasargod and also to 
examine the possibility of recovering compensation from Plantation 
Corporation and 
endosulfan companies."
  
However, instead of directly constituting a tribunal, the government 
constituted a committee with retired high court judge C N Ramachandran 
Nair as chairman and 
the Director General of Prosecution and the Law Secretary to the 
government as members. The task of the committee was to "report on the 
need to constitute a 
tribunal to settle claims of endosulfan victims of Kasargod and also to 
examine the possibility of recovering compensation from Plantation 
Corporation and 
endosulfan companies."
Committee report
Even as the committee recommended the setting up of a single judge 
tribunal, it had altogether different ideas about the terms of 
reference. "We have to state 
that the existing law of the country permits any victim to proceed in 
tort against the plantation company and if required against endosulfan 
manufacturers and 
suppliers before a civil court to claim damages," says the committee 
report. "On the other hand, victims have received compensation in part 
and are receiving 
monthly pension, ration, medical, education and other assistance 
rendered by the government as part of the implementation of the 
recommendations of the NHRC." 
The latter statement relates to the report dated 31 December 2010 from 
the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) that had recommended 
'solacium' to the victims 
upto a maximum of five lakh rupees. The total amount required for this, 
Rs.120 crores was to be shared equally by the PCK and the government. 
PCK had paid Rs 
27.40 crores in May 2012. Since the plantation company is already paying
 an amount, the committee seems to be emphatic that the proposed 
tribunal should not 
entertain any litigation against the corporation seeking further 
compensation.
 
Activist and writer M A Rehman points out that what the NHRC had 
recommended was 'solacium' and not 'compensation'. Solacium is only 
interim relief. Dr Asheel, 
Nodal Officer, Endosulfan Rehabilitation explains how the compensation 
should be arrived at in such cases: "If a child is crippled or becomes 
mentally retarded, 
the compensation should be based on what the child lost in his or her 
future life due to the spraying of endosulfan." It cannot even be 
likened to insurance 
payment to the victim of a road accident, because in that case, 
negligence could be alleged on the part of the victim. "But here the 
innocents were inside their 
homes."
 
The committee also goes on to protect the endosulfan companies from 
being brought under the scanner of the proposed tribunal on the argument
 that these companies 
were given a licence to produce the chemical under the Insecticides Act 
of the central government. Thus they are most likely to be exonerated on
 the grounds that 
their actions were legal in nature. In this context, Dr Asheel however 
points out that studies as early as 1979 had warned about the 
deleterious effects of the 
pesticide and hence, no one can shun responsibility. The approach of the
 committee thus appears to be almost akin to exonerating the 
perpetrators.
 
Having poured water over the two burning issues of the victims, the 
committee addresses the source of funds for future and seems to be clear
 that the liability to 
pay compensation should be taken over by the government. It can however 
'expect' contribution from the central government, banks and other 
public undertakings, 
the plantation corporation and the endosulfan manufacturers like 
Hindustan Insecticides Ltd. It should be noted, however, that 
contributions by the latter parties 
are viewed as voluntary charity and also that the corporation and the 
insecticide manufacturers are placed on par with financial institutions 
that had nothing to 
do with the whole episode.
 
The biggest let-down in the committee's report perhaps lies in the fact 
that it has sought to put a ceiling on the compensation to be 
adjudicated by the tribunal. 
NHRC had fixed a maximum amount for various types of disabilities, the 
highest being five lakh rupees. The committee says that the total amount
 received by a 
victim, including the amount that the tribunal may decide to award him, 
should not exceed the ceiling prescribed by NHRC.
 
Identifying victims
That practically leaves only one job for the tribunal. Eliminate and 
include. There are allegations that a few are getting solacium or 
pension even though they 
are not endosulfan victims. The 'Plantation Protection Samithi' - an 
organisation of workers of the PCK keen to protect their livelihoods - 
has alleged that even 
those who fell down from the coconut tree or those who suffer from 
working in hazardous conditions in the Gulf countries have now become 
beneficiaries. On the 
other hand, P K Sudheerbabu, Deputy Collector, Endosulfan Victims Relief
 Cell says that the names of 28 among the dead have not been included in
 the list of the 
endosulfan victims due to the disputes raised by the Samithi.
 
And then, there is the question of inclusion. Exclusion or inclusion is 
at present being decided through a series of screenings, starting at the
 Primary Health 
Centre and concluding with a medical board comprised of experts from all
 specialities. Is there a need for a judicial review of the medical 
adjudication is the 
moot question.
Also, given the fact that the time taken for endosulfan to break down 
into the soil is six years, and aerial spraying was halted only in 2000,
 are there 
possibilities of new victims? Dr Asheel says there are no chances of 
further contamination due to environmental reasons. "Now in Kasagod, 
endosulfan is found only 
in human blood and human fat."  He, however, explains that a girl who 
has been exposed to endosulfan during the reproductive period of her 
life, could cause 
symptoms in her child. So, genetic or perinatal reasons may persist. 
A clouded future
Jayakumar also raises the issues of social rehabilitation, environmental
 rehabilitation and rejuvenation that a properly assigned tribunal could
 look into. "More 
than the compensation, I'm concerned about the fate of hundreds of 
children who are now 17 or 18; those who cannot manage their daily life 
without assistance," 
says Vigneswara Bhat, president of Kallar panchayat. "Now their parents 
or someone else is there to take care of them. But what happens when the
 parents or 
caregivers die?" 
Bhat says there are hundreds of such children in Kasargod district whose
 future hangs in the balance. The tribunal should be able to do 
something to help them, he 
feels. He is also hopeful of an effective and helpful tribunal being set
 up, despite the restrictive report presented by the Justice 
Ramachandran Committee.
 
It is difficult, however, to share the optimism of the panchayat 
president if you scan the checkered history of endosulfan victims in 
Kasargod. Every opportunity 
has been used by the establishment for prevarication, postponement, 
inaction and abdication of responsibility. A report of this kind with an
 aura of judicial 
respectability can always be highlighted as one more convenient excuse.
  
- See more at: http://indiatogether.org/2013/aug/env-endosulfn.htm#sthash.C8EBQJ28.Rm2p6wmX.dpuf|   | 
 
                                 
   ENDOSULFAN VICTIMS      
A committee to exonerate industry?
The recommendations of the committee constituted to look into the claims of endosulfan victims in Kasargod and decide on the need to set up a tribunal to settle those, appear to be largely sympathetic towards the Plantation Corporation and endosulfan manufacturers. P N Venugopal reports.
    
      
             
A committee to exonerate industry?
The recommendations of the committee constituted to look into the claims of endosulfan victims in Kasargod and decide on the need to set up a tribunal to settle those, appear to be largely sympathetic towards the Plantation Corporation and endosulfan manufacturers. P N Venugopal reports.
 
      | 
 | 
 31 August 2013 -   From 1979, the chemical endosulfan began to be extensively sprayed  aerially in the cashew plantations of the Plantation Corporation of  Kerala (PCK) spread over  2209 hectares in various divisions of Kasargod district in Kerala. Soon  after, reports of unusual health disorders started coming in from  villages like Vaninagar,  Adur, Mulleria, Padre, and Kallar. Disorders of the central nervous  system, cerebral palsy, mental and physical retardation, epilepsy and  congenital anomalies  became very common in the region.
     31 August 2013 -   From 1979, the chemical endosulfan began to be extensively sprayed  aerially in the cashew plantations of the Plantation Corporation of  Kerala (PCK) spread over  2209 hectares in various divisions of Kasargod district in Kerala. Soon  after, reports of unusual health disorders started coming in from  villages like Vaninagar,  Adur, Mulleria, Padre, and Kallar. Disorders of the central nervous  system, cerebral palsy, mental and physical retardation, epilepsy and  congenital anomalies  became very common in the region.  
 There were also many cases of liver cancer, blood cancer, infertility,  miscarriage, hormonal imbalance, skin diseases and asthma. Around a  thousand people died,  more than 2300 are even today either bed-ridden or require assistance  for living, and at least 1600 others are suffering from less  debilitating ailments. The list  is also ever expanding. Thanal, an NGO involved in research and  rehabilitation in the area, estimates the final figure of affected  persons to be between 8000 to  10,000.    
 Starting with Dr Y S Mohankumar, who was the first to link the spraying  of endosulfan to the unnatural disorders that gradually enveloped a  large community, a  whole generation of social/health workers and voluntary organisations  have involved themselves in the palliative care and rehabilitation of  endosulfan victims. It  is due to their incessant interventions and agitation, which included  fasts, conventions, awareness camps and the like, that the victims are  getting some succour.   
 Successive governments, regardless of the combination of parties in  power, remained mulish and unmoved for a large part of the last three  decades. It was only in  2008 that the Kerala  government owned up to some responsibility in the  matter, when V S Achutanandan, Chief Minister at the time, distributed  relief amounts to  the next of kin of 135 deceased victims.   
 By this time, the clamour was loud and clear that the victims, both the  dead and the living-dead, had to be paid compensation. It was seen as a  right and as the  only way to set right a massive wrong. There were several factors  ranging from money to manpower that had deterred many victims or their  relatives from going to  the civil court earlier. More discouraging was the bitter experiences of  those who had approached the courts as well as the time that had  lapsed, making most of  the appeals barred by the statutes of limitation. It was in this  background that a demand for setting up of a tribunal gathered strength.    
 "The people of Kasargod and the activists expected those responsible for  the tragedy, be it the PCK, the endosulfan manufacturers or  institutions like the  agricultural university which gave the wrong advice, to be fixed by the  tribunal," says Jayakumar of Thanal. And a tribunal would help to avoid  all the cumbersome  delays and expenditure of claiming compensation by approaching a civil  court.   
| 
 | 
 However, instead of directly constituting a tribunal, the government  constituted a committee with retired high court judge C N Ramachandran  Nair as chairman and  the Director General of Prosecution and the Law Secretary to the  government as members. The task of the committee was to "report on the  need to constitute a  tribunal to settle claims of endosulfan victims of Kasargod and also to  examine the possibility of recovering compensation from Plantation  Corporation and  endosulfan companies."
      However, instead of directly constituting a tribunal, the government  constituted a committee with retired high court judge C N Ramachandran  Nair as chairman and  the Director General of Prosecution and the Law Secretary to the  government as members. The task of the committee was to "report on the  need to constitute a  tribunal to settle claims of endosulfan victims of Kasargod and also to  examine the possibility of recovering compensation from Plantation  Corporation and  endosulfan companies."  
 Committee report  
 Even as the committee recommended the setting up of a single judge  tribunal, it had altogether different ideas about the terms of  reference. "We have to state  that the existing law of the country permits any victim to proceed in  tort against the plantation company and if required against endosulfan  manufacturers and  suppliers before a civil court to claim damages," says the committee  report. "On the other hand, victims have received compensation in part  and are receiving  monthly pension, ration, medical, education and other assistance  rendered by the government as part of the implementation of the  recommendations of the NHRC."   
 The latter statement relates to the report dated 31 December 2010 from  the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) that had recommended  'solacium' to the victims  upto a maximum of five lakh rupees. The total amount required for this,  Rs.120 crores was to be shared equally by the PCK and the government.  PCK had paid Rs  27.40 crores in May 2012. Since the plantation company is already paying  an amount, the committee seems to be emphatic that the proposed  tribunal should not  entertain any litigation against the corporation seeking further  compensation.   
 Activist and writer M A Rehman points out that what the NHRC had  recommended was 'solacium' and not 'compensation'. Solacium is only  interim relief. Dr Asheel,  Nodal Officer, Endosulfan Rehabilitation explains how the compensation  should be arrived at in such cases: "If a child is crippled or becomes  mentally retarded,  the compensation should be based on what the child lost in his or her  future life due to the spraying of endosulfan." It cannot even be  likened to insurance  payment to the victim of a road accident, because in that case,  negligence could be alleged on the part of the victim. "But here the  innocents were inside their  homes."   
 The committee also goes on to protect the endosulfan companies from  being brought under the scanner of the proposed tribunal on the argument  that these companies  were given a licence to produce the chemical under the Insecticides Act  of the central government. Thus they are most likely to be exonerated on  the grounds that  their actions were legal in nature. In this context, Dr Asheel however  points out that studies as early as 1979 had warned about the  deleterious effects of the  pesticide and hence, no one can shun responsibility. The approach of the  committee thus appears to be almost akin to exonerating the  perpetrators.   
 Having poured water over the two burning issues of the victims, the  committee addresses the source of funds for future and seems to be clear  that the liability to  pay compensation should be taken over by the government. It can however  'expect' contribution from the central government, banks and other  public undertakings,  the plantation corporation and the endosulfan manufacturers like  Hindustan Insecticides Ltd. It should be noted, however, that  contributions by the latter parties  are viewed as voluntary charity and also that the corporation and the  insecticide manufacturers are placed on par with financial institutions  that had nothing to  do with the whole episode.   
 The biggest let-down in the committee's report perhaps lies in the fact  that it has sought to put a ceiling on the compensation to be  adjudicated by the tribunal.  NHRC had fixed a maximum amount for various types of disabilities, the  highest being five lakh rupees. The committee says that the total amount  received by a  victim, including the amount that the tribunal may decide to award him,  should not exceed the ceiling prescribed by NHRC.   
 Identifying victims  
 That practically leaves only one job for the tribunal. Eliminate and  include. There are allegations that a few are getting solacium or  pension even though they  are not endosulfan victims. The 'Plantation Protection Samithi' - an  organisation of workers of the PCK keen to protect their livelihoods -  has alleged that even  those who fell down from the coconut tree or those who suffer from  working in hazardous conditions in the Gulf countries have now become  beneficiaries. On the  other hand, P K Sudheerbabu, Deputy Collector, Endosulfan Victims Relief  Cell says that the names of 28 among the dead have not been included in  the list of the  endosulfan victims due to the disputes raised by the Samithi.   
 And then, there is the question of inclusion. Exclusion or inclusion is  at present being decided through a series of screenings, starting at the  Primary Health  Centre and concluding with a medical board comprised of experts from all  specialities. Is there a need for a judicial review of the medical  adjudication is the  moot question.  
 Also, given the fact that the time taken for endosulfan to break down  into the soil is six years, and aerial spraying was halted only in 2000,  are there  possibilities of new victims? Dr Asheel says there are no chances of  further contamination due to environmental reasons. "Now in Kasagod,  endosulfan is found only  in human blood and human fat."  He, however, explains that a girl who  has been exposed to endosulfan during the reproductive period of her  life, could cause  symptoms in her child. So, genetic or perinatal reasons may persist.   
 A clouded future  
 Jayakumar also raises the issues of social rehabilitation, environmental  rehabilitation and rejuvenation that a properly assigned tribunal could  look into. "More  than the compensation, I'm concerned about the fate of hundreds of  children who are now 17 or 18; those who cannot manage their daily life  without assistance,"  says Vigneswara Bhat, president of Kallar panchayat. "Now their parents  or someone else is there to take care of them. But what happens when the  parents or  caregivers die?"   
 Bhat says there are hundreds of such children in Kasargod district whose  future hangs in the balance. The tribunal should be able to do  something to help them, he  feels. He is also hopeful of an effective and helpful tribunal being set  up, despite the restrictive report presented by the Justice  Ramachandran Committee.   
 It is difficult, however, to share the optimism of the panchayat  president if you scan the checkered history of endosulfan victims in  Kasargod. Every opportunity  has been used by the establishment for prevarication, postponement,  inaction and abdication of responsibility. A report of this kind with an  aura of judicial  respectability can always be highlighted as one more convenient excuse.      
⊕
⊕
      P N Venugopal      
31 Aug 2013
        31 Aug 2013
   P N Venugopal is an independent journalist with The Quest Features and Footage, Kochi.   
- See more at: http://indiatogether.org/2013/aug/env-endosulfn.htm#sthash.C8EBQJ28.dpuf
 
   
 
No comments:
Post a Comment