-
Farrell flattery primes Ireland for Australia clash
-
Mission impossible? England take the World Cup high road against Mexico
-
'I was just missing a goal,' says Spain's Yamal
-
Ukraine, Russia vow escalation as strikes on Kyiv kill 27
-
'Royal wedding': Epic Swift-Kelce fairytale marriage begins
-
Messi meeting the "game of our lives", says Cape Verde coach
-
France's Barcola expecting physical Paraguay clash at World Cup
-
Do not open until 2276: US burying time capsule to mark July 4
-
Sciver-Brunt and Knight send England into Women's T20 World Cup final
-
Scaloni warns Argentina that Cape Verde success 'no accident'
-
Spain power into last 16 at World Cup, Portugal face Croatia
-
Spain ease past Austria with 3-0 World Cup win
-
Emotional Dimitrov enjoys redemptive Wimbledon win over Mensik
-
Endrick says versatility could help Brazil against Norway
-
New York ready for epic Swift-Kelce fairytale wedding
-
Ghana have 'duty to Africa' to progress at World Cup, says Queiroz
-
Rubio says USA 'screwed' by World Cup red card
-
Former Celtics star Brown in shock over trade to 76ers
-
Heat dome roasts eastern US ahead of holiday weekend
-
Progress, further delay risk for Boeing Air Force One: report
-
WHO declares cruise ship hantavirus outbreak over
-
US coach Pochettino '200% Argentine' but embraces Americana
-
Sciver-Brunt and Knight take England to 169-5 in South Africa semi-final
-
Ukraine, Russia vow escalation after Moscow strikes on Kyiv kill 25
-
Trump's massive July 4 firework show raises health alarms
-
Prosecutors can review Woods medical records in DUI case: judge
-
Pogacar expects Vingegaard Tour de France battle to last 'years'
-
Japan deploys bear cameras in mountains as attacks surge
-
New York ready for epic Swift-Kelce love story wedding
-
Djokovic has history in his sights at Wimbledon
-
Wildfires rage in southern France, 3,000 people evacuated
-
Ovechkin returning to Caps for 22nd NHL season
-
Hamilton gives F1 a piece of his mind over Lego cars
-
Faster than Mbappe: Australia flyer Bos races into World Cup conversation
-
Hong Kong bookseller once held in China dies in Taiwan
-
Trump wants 'senseless killing' in Ukraine to end: US official
-
Venezuelan rescue brings hope to nation in mourning
-
Eala writes history for Philippines in 'electric' Wimbledon atmosphere
-
Macabre night in La Guaira, Venezuela's earthquake epicenter
-
Wolff urges 'perspective' as Russell chases Mercedes' teammate Antonelli
-
Tesla global auto sales jump 25% in 2nd quarter, beating expectations
-
Superb Swiatek, Zverev cruise into Wimbledon last 32
-
Zverev routs Royer to reach Wimbledon third round
-
Ukraine, Russia vow escalation after Moscow attack kills 21 in Kyiv
-
Hot spell roasts eastern US ahead of holiday weekend
-
Slowing US job growth poses midterms challenge for Trump
-
Hamilton cools fans Ferrari fervour
-
Klopp poised to replace Nagelsmann as Germany coach: reports
-
Venezuela's diaspora searches for quake victims on social media
-
More than 400 dead in DR Congo's spreading Ebola outbreak
Four decades of horror after India's Bhopal gas disaster
Just after midnight as poisonous plumes of smoke wafted through the Indian city of Bhopal four decades ago, Gas Devi was born, gasping for every breath.
Her feeble cries were drowned out by the screams of men, women and children as they ran to escape the cloud of highly toxic gas leaking from the Union Carbide factory on the night of December 2, 1984.
Some 3,500 people were killed in the immediate aftermath, and up to 25,000 are estimated to have died overall in the world's deadliest industrial disaster.
Forty years later, the horror continues to blight the lives of those like Devi -- as well as countless others born with deformities since that fateful night.
Devi, a daily wage labourer, has constant pain in her chest, one of her lungs is not developed fully and she keeps falling sick.
"My life is a living hell," Devi told AFP, speaking at her shanty in Bhopal, the capital of the central state of Madhya Pradesh.
Even if she wanted, she cannot forgot the night she was born.
"My parents named me Gas," she said, her eyes welling up. "I believe this name is a curse. I wish I had died that night".
Twenty-seven tonnes of methyl isocyanate (MIC), used in the production of pesticides, swept through the city of over two million people after one of the tanks storing the deadly chemical shattered its concrete casing.
As the white cloud of MIC shrouded areas close to the factory, people started collapsing in the streets.
Nathuram Soni, now 81, was among the first to rush out.
"People were frothing from their mouths. Some had defecated, some were choking in their own vomit," said Soni.
A handkerchief tied over his nose, Soni used his pushcart to carry his wailing neighbours, many of them infants, to hospital.
- Unrelenting tragedy -
Rashida Bee, co-founder of the Chingari Trust charity that offers free treatment to children of gas-affected families, believes those who died were fortunate.
"At least their misery ended," she said. "The unfortunate are those who survived".
Her trust has seen more than 150 children being admitted this year alone with cerebral palsy, hearing and speech impairments and other disabilities.
She blames the disorders on the accident and the contamination of the groundwater.
Testing of groundwater near the site in the past revealed cancer- and birth defect-causing chemicals 50 times higher than what is accepted as safe by the US Environmental Protection Agency.
"This tragedy is showing no signs of relenting," said Rashida, 68, who has lost several members of her family to cancer since the accident.
"The soil and water here are contaminated -- that is why kids are still being born with deformities."
Union Carbide, which was acquired by the Michigan-based Dow Chemical Company in 2001, routinely dumped chemical waste years before the disaster, campaigners say.
Large evaporation ponds outside the factory were filled with thousands of litres of liquid waste.
Toxins penetrated the soil and the water supplying several neighbourhoods.
Dow Chemical did not respond to AFP's request for comment.
Tasleem Bano, 48, is convinced of a link between the plant and congenital illnesses.
Her son Mohammed Salman's limbs were splayed when he was born.
"His twin brother died in the womb. Salman survived but he could not speak a word till he was six years old," she said, showing her son's braces that help him to stand.
"Doctors say he is like this because of the gas," said Tasleem, who inhaled the fumes as a young girl living close to the factory.
Salman, 12, could only respond with a toothy grin when asked his name.
Like Salman, hundreds of children at the Chingari centre struggle to speak, walk or eat their meals.
- 'Corporate massacre' -
At the nearby Sambhavna Trust clinic, there is a steady queue of gas survivors seeking treatment.
"Data very clearly shows that mortality in the exposed population compared to a matched controlled (population) is much higher," said Satinath Sarangi, founder of Sambhavna.
"In 2011, we'd taken stock through our registered cohorts and we found there was 28 percent more mortality among the gas exposed."
Sarangi, 70, said the MIC fumes damaged the immune system of affected populations and caused chromosomal aberrations, something corroborated by medical research.
"Children of gas-exposed parents have much higher prevalence of congenital malformations."
In 1989 Union Carbide, in a partial out-of-court settlement with the Indian government, agreed to pay $470 million in compensation to the victims.
But the victims themselves were not consulted in the negotiations, and received just $500 each.
The current owners have refused to pay further compensation for the catastrophe that continues to unfold till this day.
In 1991, Warren Anderson, Union Carbide chairman and chief executive at the time of the disaster, was charged in India with "culpable homicide not amounting to murder".
But he never stood trial. Anderson died aged 92 in a nursing home in Florida in 2014.
A plea seeking compensation of 500,000 rupees ($5,920) from the Indian government for each victim diagnosed with cancer or kidney ailments is languishing in courts.
Rachna Dhingra, a social activist from the Bhopal Group for Information and Action, said true justice still evades the survivors.
"Until today, not a single individual has gone to jail -- even for a day -- for killing more than 25,000 people and injuring half a million people, and contaminating the soil and groundwater," she said.
"People in the city are continuing to fight because there is no legal mechanism to hold these corporations accountable worldwide.
"Bhopal has taught corporations how to get away with murder."
R.Garcia--AT