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Saturday, September 12, 2009

The Vietnam-Dioxin Collective

Posted by Car24h

Together, let's help the victims of Agent Orange

Created at the initiative of the young Vietnamese of France and of Vietnam, the Vietnam-Dioxin Collective is a gathering of people and organizations whose goal is to participate in an international campaign of inform public opinion and raise awareness on the continuing effects of the massive use of herbicides and pesticides (of which the infamous "Agent Orange") in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos between 1961 and 1971.

Today still, hundreds of thousands of children and adults suffer from diseases and handicaps linked to their exposure to these chemical products containing high levels of dioxin. Highly contaminated zones subsist as well.

The Vietnam-Dioxin Collective aims at drawing the attention of citizens and institutions to the problem so that economic, sanitary and environmental aid can be brought to the populations and regions, which need it the most.

The Collective participates directly in activities here in France with its human and logistical support: launch of an open letter, creation of an Internet site, organization of conference-debates, film-documentary projections, etc. Most of the organizations of the Collective have programs to support Agent Orange victims.

Vietnam-Dioxin Collective

The organizations participating in the Vietnam Dioxin Collective are:
* The Committee for the Friendship Village of Vân Canh * Vietnam the children of Dioxin * the Tâm Viêt Collective * Association of Vietnamese Students in France * General Association of Vietnamese of France * Association of Young Vietnamese of France * DEFI (challenge) Vietnam

Association Républicaine des Anciens Combattants
http://www.arac-et-mutuelle.com/Arac/
arac@arac-et-mutuelle.com
2 place du Méridien 94800 VILLEJUIF
Tel : 01 42 11 11 11
Fax : 01 42 11 11 10


Comité pour le village de l’amitié Vân Canh
www.arac-et-mutuelle.com
arac@arac-et-mutuelle.com
Le Village de l’Amitié de Van Canh, près de Hanoi, a été créé en 1994 par des anciens combattants français, allemands, britanniques, canadiens, américains et japonais. Projet de paix, de réconciliation et de fraternité, c’est un centre de soins et de rééducation contre les effets de l’Agent Orange qui accueille plus de 150 enfants et personnes âgées, victimes de la dioxine.
2 place du Méridien 94807 VILLEJUIF
Tel : 01 42 11 11 11


Droit et Solidarité
Membre de l'Association Internationale des Juristes Démocrates
160 rue du Temple 75003 Paris
tel : 01 42 78 04 50
fax : 01 42 78 03 57


Enfants du Monde - Droits de l' Homme
http://www.emdh.org
contact@emdh.org
5 rue des Haudriettes 75003 PARIS
Tel : 01 42 72 71 78
Fax : 01 42 72 64 06


Mouvement National de Lutte pour l' Environnement
mnle@wanadoo.fr
6 rue Jules Auffret 93500 Pantin
tel : 01 48 46 04 14
fax : 01 48 46 44 53


Mouvement de la Paix
http://www.mvtpaix.org/
national@mvtpaix.org
9 rue dulcie September 93400 SAINT-OUEN
tel: 01 40 12 00 12
fax: 01 40 11 57 87



Mouvement contre le Racisme et pour l’Amitié entre les Peuples
http://www.mrap.asso.fr/
43 boulevard Magenta
75010 Paris
Tel: 01 53 38 99 99
Fax: 01 40 40 90 98


Vietnam, les Enfants de la Dioxine
www.vietnamenfantsdioxine.org
vuthixp@yahoo.fr
7 Square Dunois 75013 Paris
Apt 1021
Tel/Fax : 01 45 83 12 69


D.E.F.I. Viêt Nam
andre-bouny@wanadoo.fr
(Donner Ensemble Former Informer)
"Réverie"
46400 SAINT-JEAN-LESPINASSE
Tél/Fax : 05 65 38 33 94


Union Générale des Vietnamiens de France
www.ugvf.org
ugvf@ugvf.asso.fr
16, rue du Petit Musc 75004 PARIS
Tel : 01.42.72.39.44
Fax : 01.42.77.73.48


Union des Jeunes Vietnamiens de France
www.ujvf.org
contact@ujvf.org
16, rue du Petit Musc 75004 PARIS
Tel : 01.42.72.39.44
Fax : 01.42.77.73.48


Union des Etudiants Vietnamiens de France


Americans Against the War
www.aawfrance.org
aawfrance@gmail.com
18 rue Dautencourt
75017 Paris
Tel : 03 86 28 05 98 (répondeur)



Aide au Vietnam
aideauvietnam.asso@aliceadsl.fr
Cité des Associations 93 La Canebière 13001MARSEILLE
Tel : 04 91 55 54 75
Fax : 04 91 54 84 36


LE MI-DIT
lemidit@orange.fr
Secrétariat :42, rue Papety -13007 Marseille
Tél 06 60 87 29 37
Fax 04 91 59 29 37
Collectif LE MI-DIT Martigues
lemidit.martigues@laposte.net
8, impasse du furet
13500-Martigues
04 42 06 10 25

Santé Sans Frontière
ssf@s-s-f.net
Secrétariat :42, rue Papety -13007 Marseille
Tél 06 60 87 29 37
Fax 04 91 59 29 37
Collectif Santé Sans Frontière Martigues
ssf.martigues@laposte.net
8, impasse du furet
13500-Martigues
04 42 06 10 25

Orange Fleurs d’espoir

orangefleursdespoir@gmail.com

24 rue Henri Martin 94200 IVRY

Tél. 0145831269 et 0609971197
Source by http://www.vietnam-dioxine.org

Author: Tim Wheeler
People's Weekly World Newspaper

An unprecedented meeting in Hanoi, Vietnam, March 28-29, proved that wounds from the
Photo by Daniel Shea of VFP72: children of Friendship Village in Hanoi greet conference delegates.
Vietnam War are still open and bleeding three decades after that conflict supposedly ended. It was the first International Conference of Victims of Agent Orange, and it attracted people from more than a dozen countries who are suffering the aftereffects of their exposure to Agent Orange, dioxin, and other toxic agents sprayed recklessly on Vietnam during the 10-year war.

The conference was sponsored by the Vietnam Association of Victims of Agent Orange (VAVAO).

David Cline, president of Veterans for Peace (VFP), led a delegation of five U.S. Vietnam veterans, including several who have suffered cancer and other dioxin-related illnesses or birth defects in their offspring which they blame on their exposure to Agent Orange. Cline told the World he is not an Agent Orange victim, but has struggled to recover from three wounds he sustained as a combat infantryman in Vietnam for which he received three Purple Hearts and a Bronze Star.



Still a burning issue

U.S. vet Ralph Steele talks to young boy at physical therapy session. Photo by Daniel Shea
“This conference showed us that Agent Orange is not just a ‘blast from the past,’” Cline said in a phone interview. “A huge number of children in Vietnam are suffering birth defects and deformities from their parents’ exposure to Agent Orange and other chemical agents. The Vietnamese are asking: ‘How many generations will be facing these birth defects?’”

Cline denounced successive administrations in Washington for arrogantly rejecting any responsibility for this catastrophe inflicted on the Vietnamese people. When the U.S. and Vietnam established diplomatic relations, he said, “the promises made in the Paris Peace Agreement of extensive postwar aid were nullified. There would be no more legal claims against each other. But the people in Vietnam are still suffering. We want relief for all veterans, all victims of Agent Orange. There is a certain level of responsibility that our nation owes that nation.”

In his speech to the conference, Cline said the premature death from cancer of fellow Vietnam vets first alerted him that they had been exposed to some deadly toxins in Vietnam.



U.S. companies, gov’t liable

“While the chemical companies had responsibility and should be held liable, the primary responsibility lies with the U.S. government which ordered the continued use of these poisons” after they were known to be toxic, he told the conference. “Our demand has always been testing, treatment and compensation for Agent Orange victims” by the U.S. government.

Progress was made with passage of the Agent Orange Act in 1991 admitting that these chemicals cause a long list of diseases, he continued.

“Today the Bush administration has led our country and the world into another invasion and occupation, this time in Iraq, and is now using depleted uranium that will in time poison U.S. troops and Iraqi citizens,” Cline said. “They have also used white phosphorus bombs against whole cities like Fallujah. It is time for humanity to demand an end to these weapons as part of our efforts to abolish war.”



Terrible deformities

U.S. vets join in song at Ho Chi Minh City hospital for victims of Agent Orange. Photo by Daniel Shea
Both at the conference itself and in a tour of Vietnam after the conference, the U.S. delegation witnessed firsthand the vast human tragedy, meeting deformed children struggling to develop and live a normal life.

For Cline, it was a “homecoming,” in that the tour took them to Cu Chi, a town near Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon) where he was deployed during the war and where thousands of children now are suffering from exposure to Agent Orange.

“Sometimes I thought to myself it would be merciful if they were to die because the deformities are so disabling,” he said. “But they have a whole movement going to help these children and their families live as close to a normal life as possible”



Lawsuits, petitions

VAVOA is waging a struggle both inside Vietnam and internationally to obtain the resources needed to carry on this fight, including a lawsuit filed in the United States against the chemical companies that produced Agent Orange and dioxin.

VFP has fully backed VAVOA, sponsoring a 10-city tour of the U.S. last fall in which Vietnamese Agent Orange victims spoke to many thousands about their struggle. VFP’s web site features a VAVOA petition addressed to the president of the United States demanding that both he and the chemical corporations named in the lawsuit, including Dow Chemical and Monsanto, “accept their responsibilities for the damage caused by their actions and products” and “pay full compensation to the victims.”

So far nearly 700,000 people in the U.S. have signed the petition and more than 12 million Vietnamese have signed.



Reaching across generations

Another delegate to the Hanoi conference was Joan Duffy, who served as a U.S. Air Force nurse in Vietnam during the years 1969-70.

“I turned against the war while I was serving there,” she told the World in a phone interview from her home in Santa Fe, N.M. “Three months after I arrived, I looked around and asked myself, ‘What are we doing here?’ They [U.S. personnel] sprayed the perimeter of the base where I was deployed with dioxin twice a week to ward off infiltrators.”

In recent years Duffy has fought breast and ovarian cancer and her grandson was born with a bowel disorder that nearly took his life, a condition known to be linked to dioxin exposure.

“The legal presumption is that if you were anywhere in Vietnam, you were exposed to dioxin,” she said. “It has a half-life of between 50 and 100 years, and it is estimated that 3 million Vietnamese, mostly children, are ‘profoundly affected’ by exposure to these toxins.”



Cold shoulder from judge

Judge Jack Weinstein threw the VAVOA lawsuit out, rejecting their argument that Agent Orange was a weapon subject to the Geneva Conventions and their use against civilians was a war crime. Weinstein held that Agent Orange did not target people in Vietnam but was instead a “defoliant” aimed at Vietnam’s jungle.

“My rebuttal to that is that it wasn’t used simply to defoliate,” Duffy said. “It was a weapon to destroy food supplies. I don’t care what the intent was, the result is that it turned out to be a weapon. It violated so many international laws. With weapons, you try to limit their effect to combatants. But Agent Orange and dioxin affected millions of noncombatants during the war and continues to affect them today. This is a war crime.

“Agent Orange and dioxin are weapons of mass destruction,” she said. “What would you call a weapon used to starve people? If it quacks like a duck and waddles like a duck, it’s a damn duck!”

Duffy said she was deeply impressed by the superb organization of the conference held at the Ministry of Defense in Vietnam’s capital and by the stature of the participants, who included Vietnamese and international scientific experts on toxic chemical agents, a member of Parliament from New Zealand and top legal and medical experts in the field. It was covered extensively by the world media, although virtually ignored by the U.S. news media.



‘We must take responsibility’

Doctors charge third generation of birth defects in Vietnamese children caused by Agent Orange and dioxin spraying. Photo by Daniel Shea
During the conference they traveled to Friendship Village, built by the late George Mizo, a Vietnam veteran, to shelter hundreds of child victims of Agent Orange and dioxin.

“To see these children in person changes your life forever,” Duffy said. “They are so afflicted by such bizarre mutations. Yet the Vietnamese are doing a very good job of educating those who can be educated and stimulating children who are profoundly retarded.”

The experience, she said, strengthened her resolve to take action when she returned home. “Let’s hope we can make a difference in this year’s elections. Without a change in our nation’s political direction, I fear we are lost. Bush’s poll ratings go down, down. I just hope all those people who are angry and disillusioned get out and vote.”

Another delegate to the Hanoi conference was Dan Shea of Portland, Ore. He believes that his exposure to Agent Orange during his tour of duty in Vietnam cost him his son’s life.

“I tried to put the Vietnam War on the back shelf when I returned home, but my first child was born with a severe congenital heart defect,” Shea told the World. When his son reached age 3, heart surgery was performed. One day in 1981, he went into convulsions and fell into a coma.

“He died in my arms,” Shea said. “The war has a way of coming back to bite you. I never applied for any VA benefits. I didn’t want to have anything to do with them. I decided to devote the rest of my life to the search for peace and justice.”

Shea continued: “Going back to Vietnam was a healing process for me. I told the conference about the death of my child. People came up to me with tears in their eyes to say how sorry they were for my loss. And I was thinking about all the children they have lost. We need to take responsibility for what we did in Vietnam.”

Tim Wheeler (greenerpastures21212@yahoo.com) is national political correspondent for the People’s Weekly World.


A conference of the Vietnamese and US Pressure Group on Agent Orange/dioxin was held in Da Nang city on April 21 to review new progress in dealing with the consequences of Agent Orange/dioxin used by the US army during the war in Vietnam.

Present at the meeting were representatives of the Ford Foundation, UNICEF, the Office of the national steering board for overcoming the consequences of toxic chemicals used by the US during the Vietnam war (Office 33), the Vietnam Association for Victims of AO/dioxin (VAVA), Da Nang city, Quang Tri and Dong Nai provinces and a number of non-governmental organisations.

The participants help strong opinions about an agreement on the group’s forthcoming action plan and presented various solutions to resolve all the problems that have arisen during the process of dealing with the effects of the AO/dioxin.

Representatives of Office 33 delivered a comprehensive report on the AO/ dioxin issue in Vietnam and the progress of detoxification work being done at Da Nang and Bien Hoa airports.

Da Nang city and Quang Tri and Dong Nai provinces reported on the effects of AO/dioxin in their localities and possible cooperation programmes in the future.

According to Ton Nu Thi Ninh, who is the initiator and former co-chair of the Vietnam-US Pressure Group on AO/dioxin, the group is the most effective way of ensuring a concentrated approach by Vietnam and the US in the AO/dioxin matter.

Dr. Charles Bailey, Director of the Ford Foundation’s Special Initiative on AO/dioxin, said that in the 1960s, US troops used AO and other defoliants to destroy about 10 percent of forests and trees in Vietnam’s central and southern regions.

Chemicals containing dioxin are very harmful to people, he said, adding that even though the AO/dioxin was used by the US during the war, it remains an outstanding matter as exposure to AO/dioxin and chronic diseases are closely related to the increasing number of children being born with deformities.

AO/dioxin victims in Vietnam include soldiers and civilians who were present in the areas that were sprayed with AO/dioxin in the 1060s, their descendants and those who live near the former demilitarized zones contaminated by the dioxin.



http://lecourrier.vnagency.com.vn


Overseas Vietnamese communities in the UK and Denmark have raised 7,800 USD for Agent Orange/Dioxin (AO) victims in Vietnam.

The Vietnam Association for Victims of Agent Orange/Dioxin (VAVA) received the donations on June 28 through the Vietnamese Embassy in the UK and the Vietnam Committee for Overseas Vietnamese Affairs.

Both overseas Vietnamese communities have been active in their support for the plight of AO victims in Vietnam and have made efforts to ratchet up their efforts to back the later’s lawsuit against 37 US chemical companies at the US Court of Appeals.

According to the VAVA, around 4.8 million Vietnamese people have been exposed to the dioxin and over 3 million of them have suffered long-term and often severe health problems as a result of exposure to the noxious herbicide.

To date, Vietnam has yet to receive compensation from the US companies that include global giant Dow Chemicals, although Vietnam War veterans from New Zealand, Australia, US, Canada and the Republic of Korea have all received compensation packages.

Overseas Vietnamese communities in the UK and Denmark have raised 7,800 USD for Agent Orange/Dioxin (AO) victims in Vietnam.

The Vietnam Association for Victims of Agent Orange/Dioxin (VAVA) received the donations on June 28 through the Vietnamese Embassy in the UK and the Vietnam Committee for Overseas Vietnamese Affairs.

Both overseas Vietnamese communities have been active in their support for the plight of AO victims in Vietnam and have made efforts to ratchet up their efforts to back the later’s lawsuit against 37 US chemical companies at the US Court of Appeals.

According to the VAVA, around 4.8 million Vietnamese people have been exposed to the dioxin and over 3 million of them have suffered long-term and often severe health problems as a result of exposure to the noxious herbicide.

To date, Vietnam has yet to receive compensation from the US companies that include global giant Dow Chemicals, although Vietnam War veterans from New Zealand, Australia, US, Canada and the Republic of Korea have all received compensation packages.

Funds raised for war invalids, soldiers’ families

The country’s war veterans have recently completed a nation-wide charity drive for war invalids and the families of soldiers killed in battle, according to an official from the Vietnam War Veterans Association.

Over 19.7 billion VND has been collected after the Vietnam Central Fatherland Front initiated the campaign as part of their 60th anniversary of the War Invalids and Martyrs’ Day (July 27), said Tran Hanh, the association’s Secretary General.

War Veterans Associations at localities dotted throughout the country also built more than 1,600 houses, worth over 12.3 billion VND, upgraded a further 4.200 homes at a cost of almost 11.2 billion VND and presented over 3,600 saving books, worth 1,38 billion VND, to the disadvantaged.

The associations also worked on search and recovery operations that brought home close to 1,000 sets of remains of soldiers that died overseas, and pumped more than 3 trillion VND into upgrading military cemeteries nationwide.

RoK journalists discuss ways to boost ties

Journalists from Vietnam and the Republic of Korea (RoK) gathered in Ha Noi on June 28 to discuss their role in boosting economic cooperation between the two countries.

The talks marked the beginning of a drive initiated by the Journalists’ Associations of Vietnam and the RoK to promote activities in addition to programmes to exchange visits and share experiences between the two associations.

“In each development step of Vietnam-RoK ties, the press of the two countries have been playing an important role in boosting cooperation by creating an information bridge to help the two peoples better understand each other, particularly in the economic, cultural and social areas,” said Le Quoc Trung, Permanent Vice Chairman of the Vietnam Journalists’ Association.

Vice Chairman of the RoK Journalists’ Association Kwon Young Chul said media in the RoK is keen to promote Vietnam’s image in the country so that their public is up to date on investment opportunities in the country.

While in Vietnam, the 10-member delegation of the RoK Journalists’ Association visited the Vietnam News Agency and was received by General Director Nguyen Quoc Uy.

Project helps Vietnam improve diplomacy

A project supported by the UNDP and the Embassy of France has helped Vietnam improve on its multilateral development diplomacy (MDD).

After running for three years, the project, entitled “Strengthening capacities for multilateral development diplomacy,” has provided training for nearly 700 diplomats at various ministries, agencies and localities.

An information centre has also been set up at the Institute for International Relations that offers more than 300 book titles, magazines and CD-ROMs on MDD.

Ngo Duy Ngo, Deputy Director of the Institute, said since Vietnam was admitted to the World Trade Organisation and is now running for a non-permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council for the 2008-2009 term, the demand for multilateral diplomacy is high.

Ngo also said multilateral diplomacy will now be included as part of the institute’s compulsory curriculum for the 2007-2008 academic year which begins in September of this year.

US foundation funds hospital expansion

United States non-governmental organisation, East-Meets-West, has decided to grant 3.5 million USD to Da Nang hospital in order to open up two new departments.

The aid package, to be used to establish the Cancer and Tumours Department and the Tropical Medicine Department, was approved by Deputy Prime Minister Pham Gia Khiem, on June 27, who ordered Da Nang’s municipal administration to oversee the smooth implementation of the programme.

This deal is one of ten aid projects that the East-Meet-West Foundation has committed to Da Nang city for the 2006 fiscal year. The majority of the foundation’s schemes revolve around child health, education and the disadvantaged.

USAID helps promote private sector’s bird flu awareness

Key government ministries and departments joined private animal, pharmaceutical, and feed companies to promote the private sector’s bird flu awareness at an USAID-sponsored workshop in Ha Noi on June 28.

The event is part of a project funded by the US Agency for International Development to create a strategy for increased engagement of the private sector in bird flu awareness raising.

The project, implemented by the Australian Foundation for Peoples of Asia and the Pacific (AFAP) and Kenan Institute Asia, is entitled “Targeting Avian Influenza in Hoa Binh province and surrounding localities”.

The seven-month project, which will last until this August, draws the participation of 4,000 local paravets, poultry farmers and community members, as well as district level government staff. It was intended to strengthen capacity in poultry bio-security and detection, diagnosis, monitoring and control of bird flu.

The project takes an innovative dual approach to private sector engagement by facilitating the participation of ground level sales and marketing practitioners as well as senior executives.

“With the recent bird flu outbreaks in Vietnam, this workshop is timely, and we hope it will begin a very important dialogue between the public and private sectors in terms of enhanced cooperation in avian influenza awareness raising,” said Uma Menon, AFAP Vietnam Country Director.

Military corps signals development in Laos

The Vietnamese army’s Military Corps No. 15 has recently completed work on a number of development assistance projects in some of Laos’s impoverished provinces.

The military unit built an irrigation complex in Sekong province, a transport project in Bolikhamsay province and established a coffee plantation in Salavan.

The corps has also offered to aid Atopeu province by undertaking planning tasks for villages, setting up rubber and cashew plantations and building a 10,000 tonne-per-year rubber processing plant.

Atopeu’s new rubber plantation will cover an area of over 7,000 ha in the Phuvong, Samakkhisay and Saysetha districts and are expected to greatly reduce poverty in the areas.

Vietnamese workers favoured in Brunei

Brunei’s demand for Vietnamese workers has seen a sharp increase recently, the Brunei Times said.

According to the paper, Vietnamese workers have strong experience and are therefore better than other foreign employees at adapting to working conditions in Brunei.

Low labour costs seem to be another decisive factor leading to a growth of interest in Vietnamese workers.

The paper cited director of Blia Future labour supply company, Sharon Chen, as saying that as much as 80 percent of the company’s clients have decided to withdraw their orders for Filipino workers, who ask for the minimum monthly salary of 600 USD to shift to labour contracts with Vietnamese workers demanding around 300 USD per month.

We have not received any complaints from Brunei employers about Vietnamese workers so far, Chen confirmed.

Foreigners enroll in HCM City college

Sixty-seven foreign students - a record - have registered to take an entrance examination for the Vietnamese ethnology department of Ho Chi Minh City’s Social Science and Humanities College, a record, according to sources from the college.

Of the 67, two are from the US, 12 from Turkey, one from Turkmenistan, and the rest from the Republic of Korea. The exam will be organised next week.

The main test involves the Vietnamese language.

Centre in HCM City to bring smiles to children

A treatment centre designed to provide free surgery for children with facial deformities is to be established in Ho Chi Minh City.

An agreement to this effect was signed between Operation Smile Vietnam and the Ho Chi Minh City Dental-Maxillo-Facial Hospital on June 27.

The centre will also organise training courses for surgeons and medical workers from southern provinces and cities.

The establishment of the facility is part of worldwide activities to mark 25 years of Operation Smile, a US-based non-profit organisation that provides free surgery in 25 countries for children and young adults born with facial deformities.

Last month, Operation Smile Vietnam and its partners raised more than 80,000 USD through the auctioning of art works in HCM City. The sum will be used to cover free surgery for some 400 children with facial deformities across the country.

Operation Smile first came to Vietnam in 1989, and has since then helped 20,000 poor children living in remote areas and trained many local doctors in medical techniques.

Over 160,000 houses built for ethnic minorities

More than 160,000 houses have been built for ethnic minority people across Vietnam during the first-half of this year as part of a bid to support socio-economic development for ethnic groups-inhabited regions.

The information was revealed at a meeting held in central Quang Nam Province on June 27 to review works relating to ethnic groups in southern provinces over the past six months.

During this period, local authorities also constructed more than 3,200 running water systems and provided close to 17,000 ha of land to more than 61,000 households.

(Source: VNA)

Hanoi, Bac Can to jointly promote tourism

Hanoi and the northern province of Bac Can signed on Wednesday a co-operation agreement in tourism and industrial development in the 2007-10 period.

The two sides will jointly organise tourism promotions and seek investment in tourism projects. Their businesses will also co-operate to build a trading centre in Bac Can. (Source: ND)

HCM City to destroy dilapidated apartments

The HCM City People's Committee instructed the construction department on Tuesday to renovate 125 old apartment blocks that are in danger of collapse.

Committee and department officials also discussed a programme to build 30,000 apartments for families whose houses have been acquired for public projects. (Source: LD)

Divorce on the rise; spousal abuse blamed

There has been a rise in divorces in recent years, a survey by the Committee for Population, Family and Children has found.

The number of cases jumped from 22,000 in 1994 to 53,000-55,000 in 2005. Domestic violence accounted for 60% of the splits. (Source: TN)

Children's art exhibition opens in capital

Around 100 pictures and paintings created by children from difficult circumstances are currently on display in Hanoi.

The exhibition, open between June 26 to 30, was jointly organised by Viet Nam's Committee for Family, Population and Children and Nhi Dong and Hoa Mi magazines.

Short play writing contest launched

A contest to write short plays on current issues like family planning, gender equality and the prevention of domestic violence was launched on Tuesday in Hanoi.

Co-organisers of the competition are the Ministry of Culture and Information and the Committee for Family, Population and Children. Prize include 14 awards for short plays and 16 for propaganda paintings. The deadline for submissions is September 30.

L'Hôspital Francais de Hanoi donates blood

Doctors, nurses and staff at the L'Hôspital Francais de Hanoi have given blood to support this year's national blood donation campaign.

The hospital organised the two-day collection recently and their efforts have been recognised by the National Institution of Haematology and Blood Transfusion.

The Institution said blood donations from offices and agencies in the city were crucial for ensuring sufficient blood supply for patients at hospitals in the north of Vietnam.

South Korea funds district construction

Construction has been announced of a new general hospital in Quang Nam Province's Nui Thanh District under the sponsorship of the South Korean Government.

The hospital, at an estimated cost of US$30mil, will be built on an area of 20 ha with 500 beds. It is expected to come into operation in late 2009.

(Source: Viet Nam News)

First let me thank the Vietnam Association of Victims of Agent Orange/Dioxin for organizing this international conference and to the Agent Orange Vets from Korea, Australia, New Zealand and Canada who have traveled here to participate.

The US delegation I am leading is made up of Agent Orange vets Frank Corcoran, Joan Duffy, Ralph Steele and Dan Shea.

I was an infantryman with the 25th Infantry Division in Cu Chi and Tay Ninh in 1967 and was wounded 3 times but do not suffer from dioxin related health conditions myself.

When I came back from the war, I had knowledge of the use of Agent Orange from having seen sprayed areas and knew that they destroyed nature, but had no knowledge of the negative effects these defoliants had on human beings.

I remember in 1969 a veteran I knew named Jeff Sharlett died of cancer at age 27 in the Miami, Florida Veterans Hospital and thinking it was strange that someone so young had cancer.

Over the years other friends of mine got sick or had deformed children or sometimes died. Mike Keegan and John Miffin who died and John and Rena Kopystenski who had several children with birth defects are among them. So this issue has always been personal to me.

In 1977, a woman who worked as a claims representative at the Chicago Veterans Administration named Maude DeVictor was the first person to really put two and two together when she witnessed the VA higher-ups denying veterans claims and covering up their health problems and the connections to dixon exposure.

The next year, 1978, a veteran name Paul Reutershan who was sick with cancer got on television and said "my government killed me in Vietnam and I didn't even know it". He began a lawsuit against the chemical companies who manufactured Agent Orange, Blue, White, Purple etc. but he never lived to see that lawsuit completed because he died within the year.

The reason that this lawsuit was started was because the VA was denying veterans claims for medical treatment and compensation and according to US law, citizens cannot sue the government for these type of claims.

From 1978-1984 the lawsuit continued and was eventually settled, although many veterans opposed the settlement for millions of dollars. Sadly many veterans got very little of that money since the army of lawyers who got involved got a good portion of it in legal fees.

I have been a member of Vietnam Veterans Against the War since 1970 and that organization played a critical role in launching the movement for justice for Agent Orange vets, supporting Maude Devictor who became the godmother of the movement, recruiting veterans to joining the lawsuit and raising general public awareness of this issue.

But we always believed that while the chemical companies had responsibility and should be held liable, the primary responsibility lay with the US government which ordered and continued to use these poisons after they were becoming aware of the negative effects on people. Instead of changing course, they covered up the facts and kept using them until 1971. After that they gave their remaining supplies to the former Army of the Republic of Vietnam who continued to use them until 1975 when that regime ceased to exist.

In VVAW, our demand has always been Testing, Treatment and Compensation for Agent Orange Victims. We never thought the lawsuit against the chemical companies was the answer, but rather a way to continue putting pressure on the US government.

Finally progress was made on that front when in 1991, Congress passed the Agent Orange Act, acknowledging several conditions as being dioxin related for purposes of medical treatment and disability compensation. It also established a mechanism for the National Academy of Sciences Institute of Medicine to review new studies and make recommendations to the Secretary of the Veterans Administration for expanding the recognized conditions.

Currently there are thirteen conditions acknowledged by the VA including two conditions among veterans children but over 27 conditions have been rejected since there was a finding by the IOM of not enough scientific research to indicate a connection to dioxin exposure.

So many veterans are still not being treated with any fairness. And how does someone give justice to all those who have died? The hidden casualties of the Vietnam War continue to grow but the struggle continues as well.

And today we need to talk about the other side of the coin, not just American, Korean, Australian, New Zealand and Canadian veterans but the people of Vietnam as well.

Remember also that these chemicals were also used in parts of Cambodia and Laos as well as along the DMZ in Korea and in Panama.

In the United States we began the Vietnam Agent Orange Relief and Responsibility Campaign to support the efforts of VAVA and join with concerned veterans and people in other countries to demand Justice for ALL Agent Orange Victims!

While the Campaign is sponsored by Veterans For Peace, it is made up of war veterans, Vietnamese-Americans, peace activists, environmentalists and other friends of Vietnam. We are supporting the international petition drive in support of the VAVA lawsuit and recently sponsored a 10 city speaking tour by 4 VAVA members.

We are also planning to encourage sympathetic representatives and senators to introduce legislation in Congress for the US government to step up to the plate and provide compensation and medical assistance, if not for political reasons, then fro moral and humanitarian purposes. It is time to really heal the wounds of that war, not to ignore them or let them fade into history.

Let me make on last point. This is a struggle to expose and end the use of chemical weapons by all nations but especially by my government. This is not just about something that happened over 30 years ago. Today the Bush administration has led our country and the world into another invasion and occupation, this time in Iraq and is now used Depleted Uranium that will in time poison US troops and Iraqi citizens. They have also used White Phosphorous bombs against whole cities like Fallujah.

It is time for humanity to demand an end to these weapons as part of our efforts to abolish war. That is what Veterans For Peace is pledged to work for. That will only come through the determined efforts of all of us, throughout the world.

The great American abolitionist Fredrick Douglass said:

"If there is no struggle, there is no progress. Those who profess to favor freedom yet depreciate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing up the ground, they want rain without the thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its many waters.

This struggle may be a moral one, or it may be a physical one, but it must be a struggle. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never has and it never will"

With that as our watchword, lets make this conference a call to all the people of the world.

Dinh Thi Minh Hoa, born 1984 in Duc Minh commune in Quang Ngai province, in her mother's arms. Her mother Le Thi My Hanh was a young volunteer during the Quang Ngai battle.

The Vietnam War has passed for almost 30 years, yet several million Vietnamese are still suffering physically and mentally from diseases caused by the US sprayings of dioxin laced toxic chemicals, particularly the Agent Orange. This responsibility, as a matter of course, should rest on the US.

On the occasion of the oral argument to be held in the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit on Monday, June 18th, 2007 in New York, for the lawsuit filed by the Vietnamese victims of these toxic chemicals, we, along with our representative organization, the Vietnam Association for Victims of Agent Orange/Dioxin (VAVA), earnestly call upon all governments, organizations and our friends, far and near, all over the world, to raise strong voices, to make every effort in demanding this U.S court rise above any illegal and immoral pressure, to make a truly fair and just decision that results in affirming the liability of the US companies, manufacturers and suppliers of these toxic chemicals, and hence due compensation for all their victims.

Our pain is a common, universal pain of all of humanity.

Justice for the Vietnamese victims of Agent Orange/Dioxin is justice for all other chemical victims in other countries, including the US

It is time to really heal the wounds of the war in Vietnam:
David Cline

David Cline, President of Veterans for Peace and co-founder of Vietnam Agent Orange Relief & Responsibility Campaign, stressed that “We are supporting the international petition drive in support of the VAVA lawsuit. It is time to really heal the wounds of that war, not to ignore them or let them fade into history.”

Nhan Dan Online reproduces the speech he delivered at the International Conference of Agent Orange Victims held in Hanoi on March 2006.

“First let me thank the Vietnam Association of Victims of Agent Orange/Dioxin for organizing this international conference and to the Agent Orange Vets from Korea, Australia, New Zealand and Canada who have traveled here to participate.

The US delegation I am leading is made up of Agent Orange vets Frank Corcoran, Joan Duffy, Ralph Steele and Dan Shea.

I was an infantryman with the 25th Infantry Division in Cu Chi and Tay Ninh in 1967 and was wounded 3 times but do not suffer from dioxin related health conditions myself.

When I came back from the war, I had knowledge of the use of Agent Orange from having seen sprayed areas and knew that they destroyed nature, but had no knowledge of the negative effects these defoliants had on human beings.

I remember in 1969 a veteran I knew named Jeff Sharlett died of cancer at age 27 in the Miami, Florida Veterans Hospital and thinking it was strange that someone so young had cancer.

Over the years other friends of mine got sick or had deformed children or sometimes died. Mike Keegan and John Miffin who died and John and Rena Kopystenski who had several children with birth defects are among them. So this issue has always been personal to me.

In 1977, a woman who worked as a claims representative at the Chicago Veterans Administration named Maude DeVictor was the first person to really put two and two together when she witnessed the VA higher-ups denying veterans claims and covering up their health problems and the connections to dixon exposure.

The next year, 1978, a veteran named Paul Reutershan who was sick with cancer got on television and said "my government killed me in Vietnam and I didn't even know it". He began a lawsuit against the chemical companies who manufactured Agent Orange, Blue, White, Purple etc. but he never lived to see that lawsuit completed because he died within the year.

The reason that this lawsuit was started was because the VA was denying veterans claims for medical treatment and compensation and according to US law (the Feres Doctrine), former military personell cannot sue the government for these type of claims.

From 1978-1984 the lawsuit continued and was eventually settled, although many veterans opposed the settlement, for 180 million dollars. Sadly many veterans got very little of that money since the army of lawyers who got involved got a good portion of it in legal fees.

I have been a member of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War since 1970 and that organization played a critical role in launching the movement for justice for Agent Orange vets, supporting Maude Devictor who became the godmother of the movement, recruiting veterans to joining the lawsuit and raising general public awareness of this issue.

But we always believed that while the chemical companies had responsibility and should be held liable, the primary responsibility lay with the US government which ordered and continued to use these poisons after they were aware of the negative effects on people. Instead of changing course, they covered up the facts and kept using them until 1971. After that they gave their remaining supplies to the former Army of the Republic of Vietnam who continued to use them until 1975 when that regime ceased to exist.

In VVAW, our demand has always been Testing, Treatment and Compensation for Agent Orange Victims. We never thought the lawsuit against the chemical companies was the answer, but rather a way to continue putting pressure on the US government.

Finally progress was made on that front when in 1991, Congress passed the Agent Orange Act, acknowledging several conditions as being dioxin related for purposes of medical treatment and disability compensation. It also established a mechanism for the National Academy of Sciences, Institute of Medicine to review new studies and make recommendations to the Secretary of the Veterans Administration for expanding the recognized conditions.

Currently there are thirteen conditions acknowledged by the VA including two conditions among veterans children but over 27 conditions have been rejected since there was a finding by the IOM of not enough scientific research to indicate a connection to dioxin exposure.

So many veterans are still not being treated with any fairness. And how does someone give justice to all those who have died? The hidden casualties of the Vietnam War continue to grow but the struggle continues as well.

And today we need to talk about the other side of the coin, not just American, Korean, Australian, New Zealand and Canadian veterans but the people of Vietnam as well.

Remember also that these chemicals were also used in parts of Cambodia and Laos as well as along the DMZ in Korea and in Panama.

In the United States we began the Vietnam Agent Orange Relief & Responsibility campaign to support the efforts of VAVA and join with concerned veterans and people, in the US and other countries to demand Justice for ALL Agent Orange Victims!

While the Campaign is sponsored by Veterans For Peace, it is made up of war veterans, Vietnamese-Americans, peace and labor activists, environmentalists and other friends of Vietnam. We are supporting the international petition drive in support of the VAVA lawsuit and recently sponsored a 10 city speaking tour by 4 VAVA members.

We are also planning to encourage sympathetic representatives and senators to introduce legislation in Congress for the US government to step up to the plate and provide compensation and medical assistance, if not for political reasons, then for moral and humanitarian purposes. It is time to really heal the wounds of that war, not to ignore them or let them fade into history.

Let me make on last point. This is a struggle to expose and end the use of chemical weapons by all nations but especially by my government. This is not just about something that happened over 30 years ago. Today the Bush administration has led our country into another war, this time in Iraq and has used Depleted Uranium weapons that will poison US troops and Iraqi citizens. They have also used White Phosphorous bombs against whole cities like Fallujah.

It is time for humanity to demand an end to these weapons as part of our efforts to abolish war. That is what Veterans For Peace is pledged to work for. That will only come through the determined efforts of all of us, throughout the world.

The great American abolitionist Fredrick Douglass once said:

"If there is no struggle, there is no progress. Those who profess to favor freedom yet depreciate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing up the ground, they want rain without the thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its many waters.This struggle may be a moral one, or it may be a physical one, but it must be a struggle. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never has and it never will"

With that as our watchword, lets make this conference a call to all the people of the world. JUSTICE FOR ALL AGENT ORANGE VICTIMS!”

Seek justice for the victims of Agent Orange: Joan A. Duffy Newberry

“The use of Agent Orange in Vietnam produced unacceptable threats to life, violated international law, and created toxic wastelands that continued to kill and injure civilian populations long after the war was over. What we do now is to seek justice for the victims of Agent Orange,” said Joan Anne Duffy Newberry, a member of Veterans for Peace in the US.

The following is her speech at the International Conference of Victims of Agent Orange/dioxin held in Hanoi on March 28-29, 2006.

“Today, I will be speaking to you about one of the most devastating materials that the United States military ever used: I am, of course, referring to Agent Orange which contained the highly toxic contaminant, dioxin. The use of Agent Orange in Vietnam produced unacceptable threats to life, violated international law, and created toxic wastelands that continued to kill and injure civilian populations long after the war was over. Agent Orange was a true weapon of mass destruction and its use should be considered a crime against humanity.

Before I begin my presentation, I would like to tell you a little bit about myself.... I was commissioned a 2/LT in the United States Air Force Nurse Corps shortly after graduating from college. I was sent to a large military base called Cam Ranh Bay in Vietnam a year later. While there, I was too busy to notice that I never heard a bird sing, and in fact, the only living things I remember seeing (other than people) were roaches: not too reassuring considering that roaches were reported to be the first things to crawl out from under the rubble at Hiroshima and Nagasaki after the atom bombs were dropped. At the hospital where I worked, there was a brick wall outside the emergency room that was covered in dead vines. I learned years later that the perimeter of Cam Ranh Bay was sprayed with Agent Orange on a regular basis because it was considered such an important military installation. Like most Vietnam Veterans, I knew nothing about Agent Orange until years later when I read about veterans with health problems who had begun to make the connection between Agent Orange exposure and illness.

So how did this tragedy of Agent Orange begin?

During World War II, Prof Kraus, Chairman of the Department of Botany at the University of Chicago, discovered that a chemical named 2,4 D could kill vegetation within 24-48 hours by causing plants to experience sudden, uncontrolled growth. Thinking this discovery might be of some use in the war effort, Kraus contacted the War Department, but Army scientists were not interested in it at that time.

Civilian scientists, however, found Kraus’ discovery to be of use in everyday life after the war.

Chemical sprays that included 2,4 D were put on the market for use in controlling weeds in yards and along roads and railroads.

The US Army continued to experiment with 2,4 D during the 1950's and late in the decade, they found that mixing it with another chemical resulted in the creation of an herbicide that had an almost immediate toxic effect on foliage. What they didn’t realize or what they chose to ignore, was that the second chemical, 2,4,5 T, contained dioxin, a molecule that the US Environmental Protection Agency would later call one of the most potentially dangerous known to man. The toxicity of dioxin is such that it is capable of killing newborn mammals and fish at levels as small as 5 parts per trillion (or one ounce in 6 million tons). It’s toxic properties are enhanced by the fact that it can enter the body through the skin, the lungs, or through the mouth. Once inside the body, dioxin rapidly binds to protein molecules in the cell membranes called receptors: the job of these receptors is to move substances into the cells. By binding with these receptors, dioxin is rapidly transported into the cytoplasm and nucleus of the cell where it then wreaks havoc for years to come. Dioxin literally modifies the functioning and genetic mechanism of the cell and affects a wide range of organ and metabolic functions. It is a potent multi-system poison that is virtually indestructible in most environments. One of the most dangerous characteristics is that dioxin is not water soluble, making it almost impossible to excrete: if it were water soluble, it could be excreted in the urine and perspiration. However, because dioxin crosses the placental barrier, levels of dioxin in pregnant women are reduced, sadly for the unborn baby. In laboratory animals, dioxin has been shown to cause cancer, birth defects and genetic damage.

Considering how toxic dioxin is, it is truly shocking that after extremely minimal experimentation, Agent Orange and other herbicides were shipped to Vietnam in 1961 to aid in anti guerilla efforts. These herbicides were used to destroy food sources and eliminate foliage that concealed enemy troop movements. On January 13, 1962, 3 United States Air Force planes left Tan Son Nhut’s airfield to begin Operation Ranch Hand to defoliate portions of South Vietnam’s heavily forested countryside. Nine months later, by Sept 1962, the spraying program had intensified, resulting in the defoliation of almost 9000 acres of mangrove forests. Over the next 9 years, an estimated 19 million gallons of Agent Orange were sprayed throughout Vietnam at a rate 6 to 25 times that suggested by the chemical manufacturers. The results of the spraying was there for all to see: over the door of the ready room for Ranch Hand pilots at Tan Son Nhut’s Airport in Saigon hung a sign that said “Only you can prevent forests”.

Unfortunately, the Agent Orange used in Vietnam was much more highly contaminated with dioxin than that used in the United States. This was the direct result of the US military pressuring the chemical manufacturers to speed up production of Agent O range because the military was using ever increasing quantities of the herbicide, practically with abandon. In an effort to work faster and increase production of Agent Orange, the chemical companies paid little attention to quality control issues and the Agent Orange destined for Vietnam became much more highly contaminated with dioxin as the result of sloppy, hasty manufacturing.

Unknown to the millions of American soldiers and Vietnamese civilians being exposed to the herbicides, the chemical manufacturers were well aware of the long term toxic effects, but they sought to suppress the information from the government and the public, fearing a negative backlash. Of particular concern to the chemical companies was Agent Orange which contained dioxin. Publicly they maintained that dioxin occurred naturally in the environment and was not harmful to humans.

Privately they knew otherwise, as evidenced by scientists involved in Operation Ranch Hand and documents uncovered recently in the US National Archives which paint a disturbing picture. There are strong indications that not only were the military officials aware as early as 1967 of the limited efficacy of chemical defoliation, they also knew of the potential long term health risks of frequent spraying and they sought to keep that information from the public. Dr, James Clary was an Air Force scientist in Vietnam who helped to write the history of Operation Ranch Hand. Clary wrote in a 1988 letter to a member of congress investigating Agent Orange that

"we were aware of the potential for damage due to dioxin contamination in Agent Orange. We were even aware that the military formulation had a higher dioxin concentration than the civilian version due to the speed of manufacture . However because the material was to be used on the enemy, none of us were overly concerned. We never considered a scenario in which our own personnel would become contaminated with the herbicide."

While the debate over the danger of Agent Orange and dioxin heated up in scientific circles, the United States Air Force continued flying defoliation sorties. People on the ground continued to live in a mist of toxic herbicides. They slept with it, drank it in their water, ate it in their food, breathed it in their lungs, absorbed it through their skin. Some of the US troops used the empty Agent Orange drums as barbeques: others stored food in them. Still others rigged the residue- laden drums for showers.

Finally in 1971, the US Surgeon General prohibited the use of Agent Orange for home use and on June 30, 1971, all US defoliation efforts in Vietnam were terminated.

As veterans attempted to settle back into civilian life, some of them began to develop unusual health problems. There were skin and liver diseases and what appeared to be an abnormal number of cancers to soft tissue organs such as the lungs and stomach. There also seemed to be an unusually high number of birth defects among children born to Vietnam Veterans. Some veterans experienced wild mood swings while others developed a painful skin condition called cloracne. Many of these veterans were found to have high levels of dioxin in their blood., but scientists, doctors and the United States government insisted that there was no link between their illnesses and their exposure to Agent Orange.

By the early 1980's, the denials of the US Government, the Veterans Administration, the US military and the chemical companies regarding Agent Orange/dioxin toxicity began to fall apart as communities such as Times Beach, Missouri entered the public eye. Times Beach, Missouri was an idyllic little community about 20 miles from St Louis. Unknown to the residents of Times Beach, dioxin-laced oil had been sprayed on the town’s roads to keep the dust down during the 1970s. The contamination was so bad that the government decided that the only way to save the town’s residents from further damage was to buy them out and move them out. In early 1983, the US government spent $33 million buying the homes and businesses in Times Beach and relocating its 2200 residents. Three years later, in 1986, the Centers for Disease Control released a report that showed that mobile home residents located near Times Beach, were suffering liver and immune system damage as a result of their exposure to the dioxin-laced oil that had been sprayed on the dirt roads in 1971. Times Beach remains a ghost town even today because of dioxin contamination. Other towns and cities became contaminated as a result of chemical spills or manufacturing emissions: some of them needed to be evacuated like Times Beach. Love Canal in Niagra Falls, New York, Sevesco, Italy, Pensacola, Florida, and the entire city of Midland, Michigan have very high levels of dioxin. While the government was paying off residents of Times Beach because of dioxin contamination, it continued to deny that Vietnam Veterans who had been exposed to Agent Orange and dioxin were at risk.

All in all, many entities conspired to keep the truth about Agent Orange and dioxin covered up: the Centers for Disease Control, scientists, chemical companies, The White House, the Veterans Administration, the US military, especially the United States Air Force. In the end, the truth won out. The Veterans Administration has been forced to admit that Agent Orange exposure/dioxin exposure causes a multitude of health problems for which they must compensate veterans. These conditions include: cancers such as leukemia, soft tissue sarcoma, cancers of the lung, larynx, bronchus, trachea, prostate, lymphomas, myeloma, Hodgkins and non Hodgkins lymphoma. Other conditions for which veterans are compensated are: nervous system disorders such as neuropathy and sensory impairment, metabolic disorders such as Type II diabetes, liver and kidney damage, skin problems such as cloracne, The Veterans Administration also must compensate veterans’ children who suffer from mutations and birth defects such as spina bifida and other neural tube defects, cleft palates, hydrocephalus, esophageal and intestinal deformities, clubfoot, fused fingers and toes, and congenital heart disease.

Agent Orange is NOT a conventional weapon: it is, instead, a weapon of mass destruction. All international law on warfare for the past 100 years has attempted to limit violence to combatants and to prevent the use of cruel and unfocused weapons. International agreements and conventions have tried to protect civilians and non-combatants from the scourge of war, to outlaw the destruction of the environment and to protect the food supply in order to safeguard life on this earth. Agent Orange is precisely the kind of weapon prohibited by international law for more than a century because of its unconfined, death-dealing effects.

Surely it must be clear to any thinking human being that we can no longer afford to seek violent solutions to the world’s problems because our weapons have become so dangerous and toxic that they kill soldiers and civilians both during the war and for years and years after the war is supposedly over. I urge you as fellow human beings to seek justice for the victims of Agent Orange.

I implore you to do this for the sake of Vietnam’s children and grandchildren, but also for the sake of the world’s children and grandchildren. What we do now, here, to seek justice for the victims of Agent Orange could very well establish an international precedent that will hold governments and corporations responsible and accountable for their actions and protect future generations from the horror of such weapons.”

Appeal of the 2006 International Conference of Victims of Agent Orange/dioxin

We victims of Agent Orange/dioxin and other toxic chemicals, together with supporters and scientists from the United States, Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Great Britain, New Zealand, Russia, the Republic of Korea, Switzerland, and Vietnam participating in the International Conference on Victims of Agent Orange/dioxin held in Hanoi, Vietnam on March 28th and 29th 2006, make the following appeal to the international community:

We have discussed the effects of Agent Orange contaminated with dioxin and other toxic chemicals on human life and health, and the sufferings of those affected. Based on this
exchange of views, we unanimously confirm the following:

  1. During the war waged in Vietnam, the US chemical companies manufactured and supplied millions of liters of toxic chemicals disguised as defoliants or herbicides. Those chemicals contained high levels of dioxin. They were an utterly lethal substance.

  2. Those toxic chemicals destroyed the environment, millions of acres of forests, leading to an imbalanced ecology, great loss of timber resources and the disappearance of several animal species as well as precious forest vegetation. As a consequence, natural disasters such as flood, erosion and drought have become more common and impacted severely on agriculture, the main source of subsistence for South Vietnamese residents.

  3. However, the worst effect of those toxic chemicals is the harm to human life and health of those exposed to them. Victims of Agent Orange/dioxin and other toxic chemicals consist of:
    a- Millions of Vietnamese living in their homes and members of the liberation armed forces, and those working for the former Saigon regime and armed forces, an ally of the US at that time.
    b- Various investigations and scientific studies (frequently with participation of foreign and American scientists) have demonstrated that Vietnamese victims have suffered a variety of serious diseases – even far more and worse than the dioxin-related diseases listed by the US National Academy of Sciences Institute of Medicine between 1994 and 1995. In addition, many female victims have experienced reproductive problems. Many of them have been deprived of the ability to bear children and to experience the joy of being a mother.
    c- The most painful effect, however, is that Agent Orange/dioxin has already harmed the next generation of children and will do the same to the following ones. Many children have been born without the experience of war but have deformed bodies and can never enjoy the simplest experience of happiness – that is to live as an ordinary human being

For the above-said reasons, victims of Agent Orange/dioxin and their families are among the poorest and most unhappy of the society. Many thousands of victims have died without justice for themselves and their families.

Source by nhadan.org.vn

By David Cline


First, let me thank the Vietnam Association of Victims of Agent Orange/Dioxin for organizing this international conference, and the Agent Orange vets from Korea, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada who have traveled here to participate. The US delegation I am leading is made up of Agent Orange vets Frank Corcoran, Joan Duffy, Ralph Steele, and Dan Shea.

I was an infantryman with the 25th Infantry Division in Cu Chi and Tay Ninh in 1967 and was wounded three times, but I do not suffer from dioxin-related health conditions myself.

When I came back from the war, I had knowledge of the use of Agent Orange from having seen sprayed areas. I knew that it destroyed nature, but I had no knowledge of the negative effects this defoliant had on human beings.

In 1969, a veteran I knew named Jeff Sharlett died of cancer at age twenty-seven in the Miami, Florida, veterans' hospital, and I remember thinking it was strange that someone so young had cancer.

Over the years, other friends of mine got sick or had deformed children, or sometimes died. Mike Keegan and John Miffin, who died, and John and Rena Kopystenski, who had several children with birth defects, are among them. So this issue has always been personal for me.

In 1977, a woman named Maude DeVictor, who worked as a claims representative at the Veterans Administration in Chicago, was the first person to really put two and two together when she witnessed the VA higher-ups denying veterans' claims and covering up their health problems and the connection to dioxin exposure.

Dave Cline, Ralph Steele, Joan Duffy, Frank Corcoran, and Dan Shea
behind Mrs. Vietnam 2005, Doan Thi Kim Hong,
performing songs for children at a hospice near Cu Chi

The next year, 1978, a veteran named Paul Reutershan, who was sick with cancer, got on television and said, "My government killed me in Vietnam, and I didn't even know it." He began a lawsuit against the chemical companies who manufactured Agent Orange, Blue, White, Purple, etc., but he never lived to see that lawsuit completed, because he died within the year.

The reason that this lawsuit was started was because the VA was denying veterans' claims for medical treatment and compensation, and according to US law, citizens cannot sue the government for these types of claims. From 1978 to 1984, the lawsuit continued, and it was eventually settled, although many veterans opposed the settlement for millions of dollars. Sadly, many veterans got very little of that money, since the army of lawyers who got involved got a good portion of it in legal fees.

I have been a member of Vietnam Veterans Against the War since 1970, and that organization played a critical role in launching the movement for justice for Agent Orange vets, supporting Maude DeVictor, who became the godmother of the movement, recruiting veterans to join the lawsuit, and raising general public awareness of this issue.

But we always believed that, while the chemical companies had responsibility and should be held liable, the primary responsibility lay with the US government, which ordered and continued to use these poisons after they were becoming aware of the negative effects on people. Instead of changing course, they covered up the facts and kept using them until 1971. After that, they gave their remaining supplies to the former army of the Republic of Vietnam, who continued to use them until 1975, when that regime ceased to exist.

In VVAW, our demand has always been for testing, treatment, and compensation for Agent Orange victims. We never thought the lawsuit against the chemical companies was the answer, but rather a way to continue putting pressure on the US government.

Finally, progress was made on that front when in 1991, Congress passed the Agent Orange Act, acknowledging several conditions as being dioxin-related for purposes of medical treatment and disability compensation. It also established a mechanism for the National Academy of Sciences Institute of Medicine to review new studies and make recommendations to the secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs for expanding the recognized conditions.

Currently, there are thirteen conditions acknowledged by the VA, including two conditions among veterans' children. But over twenty-seven conditions have been rejected, since the Institute of Medicine found insufficient scientific research to indicate a connection to dioxin exposure.

So many veterans are still not being treated with any fairness. And how does someone give justice to all those who have died? The hidden casualties of the Vietnam War continue to grow, but the struggle continues as well.

And today we need to talk about the other side of the coin: not just American, Korean, Australian, New Zealand, and Canadian veterans, but the people of Vietnam as well. Remember also that these chemicals were also used in parts of Cambodia and Laos, as well as along the DMZ in Korea and in Panama.

In the United States, we began the Vietnam Agent Orange Relief and Responsibility Campaign to support the efforts of VAVA and to join with concerned veterans and people in other countries to demand Justice for all Agent Orange victims.

While the campaign is sponsored by Veterans for Peace, it is made up of war veterans, Vietnamese Americans, peace activists, environmentalists, and other friends of Vietnam. We are supporting the international petition drive in support of the VAVA lawsuit, and we recently sponsored a ten-city speaking tour by four VAVA members.

We are also planning to encourage sympathetic representatives and senators to introduce legislation in Congress for the US government to step up to the plate and provide compensation and medical assistance, if not for political reasons, then for moral and humanitarian purposes. It is time to really heal the wounds of that war, not to ignore them or let them fade into history.

Let me make one last point. This is a struggle to expose and end the use of chemical weapons by all nations, but especially by my government. This is not just about something that happened over thirty years ago. Today, the Bush administration has led our country and the world into another invasion and occupation, this time in Iraq, and is now used depleted uranium that will, in time, poison US troops and Iraqi citizens. They have also used white phosphorous bombs against whole cities, like Fallujah.

It is time for humanity to demand an end to these weapons as part of our efforts to abolish war. That is what Veterans for Peace is pledged to work for. That will only come through the determined efforts of all of us, throughout the world.

The great American abolitionist Frederick Douglass said, "If there is no struggle there is no progress. Those who profess to favor freedom and yet deprecate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing up the ground, they want rain without thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its many waters. This struggle may be a moral one, or it may be a physical one, and it may be both moral and physical, but it must be a struggle. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will."

With that as our watchword, let's make this conference a call to all the people of the world. Justice for all Agent Orange victims!


David Cline is a national coordiantor of Vietnam Veterans Aganst the War.

Source by http://www.vvaw.org