The verdict in the Bhopal gas tragedy has brought the controversial nuclear liability bill back into sharp focus with the Opposition demanding that the government re-examine the measure. "The unfortunate experience of the Bhopal gas tragedy gives a serious food for thought to revisit the entire nuclear liability bill," Bharatiya Janata Party spokesman Ravi Shankar Prasad told reporters.He was asked whether the verdict in the Bhopal gas tragedy stregthened the Opposition demand for relook into the Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage bill.
Left parties also attacked the government over the nuclear liability bill and hoped that the Bhopal verdict would prove to be an "eye-opener" on the issue. The Bhopal disaster and the "utterly flawed" legal framework shows how the American suppliers and owners have escaped any criminal liability, a Coommunist Party of India-Marxist Polit Bureau statement said. "The Nuclear Liability Bill which excludes foreign suppliers from any liability may help more Warren Andersons,"it said. "The bill limits compensation to even less than the paltry Bhopal settlement. Pushing ahead with the bill means playing with the safety and interests of the Indian people,"the statement said.
However, Science and Technology Minister Prithviraj Chavan maintained that at present there was no law to award compensation in the event of a nuclear accident. "The nuclear liability bill precisely attempts to fill a void that exists today because the Public Liability Insurance Law
"In light of bitter experience of Bhopal, the government should reconsider the nuclear bill seriously," he said. Law Minister Veerappa Moily had said that the lessons learnt from the Bhopal verdict could also be useful while proceeding with the nuclear liability bill. However, he refused to make any comments on the matter.
The Bill, that proposes a maximum limit of liability in case of a nuclear accident at Rs 500 crore, was introduced in the Lok Sabha last month amid stiff resistance from the Opposition BJP and Left parties. It has since been referred to the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Science and Technology chaired by Congress leader T Subbirami Reddy.
Nuke establishment backs nuclear liability bill