


Twenty five years after the gas disaster in Bhopal, survivors' families have yet to be socially or economically rehabilitated. Thousands of families have lost their main breadwinners to death or illness. Surviving members live far below the poverty line in crowded slums, their ability to work limited by ill-health caused by exposure to Union Carbide's gases and from having to drink water poisoned by the factory which Carbide's owner Dow refuses to clean.
The Chingari Trust seeks to help women whose families have lost their breadwinners to find new ways to earn a living for themselves and their families. We will support, encourage and nurtue their self-help efforts in a programme which we hope will servce as an example to government of what economic rehabilitaton should be.
In broad terms the Trust will support will support income-generating activites that:
Some ideas for possible activities include:
taking up a trade l
making and marketing
urban farming
retraining to be