interviewed last night on the radio.
It was an old interview, I think, but it was fascinating.
He said a couple things that were shocking.
Almost everyone in the factory lived because they knew the explosion was coming, and there was a $50 windsock at the factory which showed which way the wind was blowing. Union Carbide wouldn't put wind socks up in the surrounding neighborhoods because they didn't want to create a climate of fear (ie, they didn't want to lose cheap labor living nearby???)
The pesticide factory was losing money, so they turned off the gas refrigeration unit at night to save $100 in electricity. A worker sounded the alarm, like, 5 times when he saw the temperature rising. The management said they wouldn't turn the electricity on.
When the explosion occurred, the people in the factory knew to run upwind. People in the slums ran in every direction. Some ran with the clound of gas. People who ran died, because they inhaled more gas. Some people who stayed in their hovels survived because they didn't run (but they suffered horrible injuries).
One of the saddest and most stunning parts of the story was that astrologers had predicted that the day before the accident was going to be the greatest day in the history of Bhopal, so everyone was on the streets celebrating, people were getting married. The explosion occurred at 5 past midnight.
The astrologers were close. It was the last good day in the history of Bhopal.
Amazon Link to Book