Agence
November 29, 2005 Tuesday
1:15 AM GMT
LENGTH: 656 words
HEADLINE: Vietnamese,
Americans highlight plight of Agent Orange victims
DATELINE:
BODY:
A group of Vietnamese and
American victims of Agent Orange converged at the Vietnam War memorial here
Monday to highlight the plight of those exposed to the highly toxic herbicide
in the bloody war.
"The victims of Agent
Orange not only suffer from its effects but pass on the problem to future
generations," said Nguyen Trong Nhan, a former president of the Vietnam
Red Cross campaigning for "justice" for the victims.
Nhan, a vice-president of
the Association of Agent Orange/Dioxin Victims in
Agent Orange was used by the
US Army in the Vietnam War to clear the jungle and prevent enemy forces from
being able to use the dense foliage for cover.
But civil society groups
claim three million Vietnamese, and tens of thousands of US soldiers who fought
in the war were affected by the chemical.
Among the Vietnamese victims
at the Vietnam War memorial in
"We are here as friends
and share the suffering and pain of the American mothers who lost their
children in the war. But the loss in
Hai's wife had
"many" miscarriages while one of their children died of cancer at a
tender age, Nhan said. Of their three living children -- two are deaf and dumb
while the third is mentally retarded.
This is the first meeting in
"The
1991 and so it has been
difficult to reconstruct the magnitute of the crime," said David Cline,
who served in Vietnam and is now the head of Veterans for Peace, a US group of
anti-war veterans.
"In terms of numbers,
at least 100,000 to 200,000 people (US soldiers who served in
"The US Department of
Veteran Affairs has statisticss on how many people they recognized as having
disability at this point but those numbers are relatively small -- like less
than 50,000," he said.
Cline said it was important
to raise awareness in the
"In some cases, the
defects have been seen in people representing three generations -- which means
it is not something that is going to go away when a certain generation
dies," he said.
A
An appeal has been lodged
against the dismissal.
"We have a
responsibility to stand with the Vietnamese in their struggle for that justice.
It's been too long," said Frank Corcoran, a
In 1984, chemical companies
that manufactured Agent Orange paid 180 million dollars into a fund for US
veterans following a lawsuit. But the companies did not admit wrongdoing and
Vietnamese victims have never been compensated.
Laura Costas of the Veterans
for Peace said the United States had failed to learned from its experience in
the Vietnam War, citing accusations that US troops had used white phosphorous
bombs and depleted uranium in Iraq.
Costas, whose brother was
among US soldiers who served in Iraq, said, "We don't know what kind of
health problems he will suffer in the future but he was definitely exposed to
depleted uranium and they don't really have a plan for the soldiers who were
exposed."