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WINNER OF BHOPALI WOMEN'S AWARD FOR WOMEN FIGHTING CORPORATE CRIME
TO BE ANNOUNCED ON DECEMBER 5TH.
29th November 2007, Bhopal/New Delhi
The world’s first award
for women fighting corporate crimes will be announced in Bhopal
on 5 December, 2007, as part of the week-long activities surrounding
the 23rd anniversary of the 1984 Bhopal gas disaster. Inspired by
their own slogan – “We are Flames, not Flowers”
– two Bhopali women survivors from the 1984 gas disaster instituted
the Chingari (Embers) Award for Women Against Corporate Crime. The
award, which includes a trophy, citation and Rs. 50,000 in cash,
is one of three things that Rashida Bee and Champa Devi Shukla decided
to do when they set up the Chingari Trust with the $125,000 Goldman
Environmental Prize received by them in 2004. Shukla and Bee received
the award for sustaining the struggle for justice for the Bhopal
survivors against the combined might of the Indian Government, Union
Carbide and its successor Dow Chemical.
The Chingari Trust and Awards are an all woman affair. Chingari
trustees, members of the awards jury and the award winners are all
women.
The Chingari Award will annually recognize one woman who is working
at great personal risk and hardship to expose and fight human rights
excesses of corporations. “The Chingari Award is particularly
relevant at this juncture where the Government has made its intentions
of submitting to corporate-led globalization extremely clear. The
coming years will see some of the world’s most powerful corporations
pitted against some of the most marginalized people – adivasis,
dalits and peasants – with the police playing hitman for the
investors,” said Suroopa Mukherjee, chairperson of the Trust
and Reader at Hindu College in New Delhi.
A six-person jury, led by Mahashweta Devi, screened 10 nominations
from rural areas around the country, and short-listed four women.
One of the four will receive the 1st Chingari Award at a ceremony
at Rajendra Bhavan, Bhopal, on 5 December. The award will be given
away by Shri Achyutanand Mishra, Vice Chancellor of Makhanlal Chaturvedi
Rashtriya Patrakarita Evam Sanchar Vishwavidyalaya, Bhopal. Other
jury members include Ajitha George (Jharkhand), S. Usha (Kerala),
Sujata Gothoskar and Mira Sadgopal (Maharashtra) and Pamela Philipose
(New Delhi).
“To fight corporate crime, one needs patience, courage, staying
power and the ability to withstand mental and physical hardships
– all inherently female qualities. We hope that the recognition
and the solidarity that will come in the wake of the award will
not only strengthen the award recipient’s campaign but also
inspire more women to lead struggles against environmental and human
rights violations of corporations,” said Chingari managing
trustees Rashida Bee and Champa Devi.
The Awards panel clarified that the prize was “more inspirational
than competitive.”
The struggle for justice in Bhopal is one of the longest-running
fights against corporate crime and Government collusion. The December
3, 1984, gas leak from Union Carbide’s pesticide factory in
Bhopal killed more than 8000 and hurt lakhs more. Survivors of the
disaster are now joined by their children in a fight to force the
Government to hold Dow Chemical – Union Carbide’s new
owner – accountable for the lingering liabilities in Bhopal.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:
Bhopal: Rashida Bee/Champa Devi
Shukla: 0755-2747500 / 09425688215 (cell-Rashida)
New Delhi: Shalini Sharma: 09891442037
Chingari Trust
44 Sant Kanwar Ram Nagar
Berasia Road
Bhopal 462018
Madhya Pradesh
India
Telephone: +91 (0)755 274 7500
Email: chingaritrust@gmail.com
Website: www.chingaritrust.org
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This beautiful
memorial to the dead of Bhopal stands outside the Union Carbide
factory. It was made by Dutch sculptress Ruth Waterman. |
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