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No Dow Chemical branding at London Olympic Stadium

Dunya News

The Dow Chemical Company has said it will not put its logos on fabric 'wrap' around main stadium.

The organisers of the 2012 London Olympics said on Monday that Dow Chemicals name will not appear on a fabric wrap around the main stadium, in an issue which sparked threats of an Indian boycott.India is opposed to the companys involvement with the Games because of its links to the 1984 Bhopal gas disaster which killed tens of thousands of people in the capital of Indias Madhya Pradesh state.The London Olympics organisers, LOCOG, said it was never their intention that Dows name would be on the wrap during the Games, but Dow had also agreed that its branding will not now appear on five test panels either.A LOCOG spokeswoman told AFP: There will definitely not be any Dow Chemical branding on the wrap before, during or after the Olympic Games.There was discussion about (having the branding on) the test panels but Dow Chemical have now agreed to adhere to what we call our clean policy.Dow is a major sponsor of both the London Games and the International Olympic Committee.Indias Olympic chief said on Friday that any decision to boycott the London Games over the involvement of Dow rested with the government.Vijay Kumar Malhotra, the acting president of the Indian Olympic Association, said his body could only lodge a protest against the use of Dow Chemical as a sponsor with the Olympic organisers, but could not decide on a boycott.Dow is now the parent company of Union Carbide, whose pesticide plant leaked gas into Bhopal in 1984 in the worlds worst industrial accident.The company has said all liabilities for the disaster were resolved after Union Carbide settled with the Indian government in 1989 by paying $470 million to the Bhopal victims.Dow Chemical spokesman Scot Wheeler said: The agreement between Dow and LOCOG was limited to branding of five test panels that were to be removed in the months before the Games and were not part of the final design.However in mid-summer, LOCOG and Dow agreed that Dow would defer the rights to these five panels to allow free and full execution of the design as determined by LOCOG.