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Vietnamese seeking redress
from US in Agent Orange suit
HANOI -- Thirty-five years after US forces stopped spraying Agent Orange
in Vietnam, Vietnamese who were exposed to the defoliant are about to have
their day in court. From 1961 to 1971, the Last year, 27 Vietnamese filed a class-action suit against the chemicals'
manufacturers, It is the first Agent Orange suit filed by Vietnamese. Hearings will begin
tomorrow in the US District Court's Second Circuit in The chemical companies have moved to dismiss the case, saying ''The companies knew that their sloppy manufacturing processes caused
Agent Orange to contain high levels of dioxin," said Jonathan Moore, one
of the plaintiffs' American lawyers. ''They ignored it, because they figured
the only people getting sprayed were 'the enemy.' " The plaintiffs also argue that spraying Agent Orange was a war crime,
since international law prohibits the use of chemical weapons. The defendants
say this claim is baseless. ''Agent Orange was a defoliant, used to protect US and South Vietnamese
troops," said Scott Wheeler, a spokesman for Dow Chemical. ''In no way
was it ever used as a weapon." The companies say that, contrary to the plaintiffs' claims, dioxin in the
trace amounts in which it was present in Agent Orange has never been shown to
cause disease in humans. Moreover, because the Last month, the For Nguyen Thang Son, such legal questions are beside the point. Son, 55,
served with the North Vietnamese Army in the border region between North and
South from 1965 to 1972, fighting in the bitter battles for control of the A
Luoi Valley and the town of ''The Americans would spray it out of planes," Son said. ''One day
you might inhale it several times. The next day once; the next day two or
three times." Today, Son says he experiences stomach troubles, difficulty breathing, and
headaches. His two children suffer even more. His daughter Nguyen Phuong Tui
is epileptic, blind, and deaf. At 29, she has the physique of a 10-year-old,
and is unable to speak or move by herself. His son Nguyen Thang Tung, 25, is blind. A graduate of Hanoi's
Conservatory of Music, Tung is an accomplished player of a traditional
single-stringed instrument called the dan
bau and performs regularly on national television. But his father worries about his future. ''No girl dares marry him,"
said Son, for fear his children will also suffer birth defects. ''That's my
greatest sorrow." No one knows how many Vietnamese have been exposed to dioxin from
American-sprayed herbicides. A recent government-commissioned study by the
Institute of Medicine, an arm of the National Academy of Science, found that
at least 2.1 million Vietnamese had been directly sprayed. Dioxin also persists in the environment and in the food chain. Studies of
Agent Orange ''hot spots" find elevated levels decades after the
spraying stopped, particularly in meat and fish. A joint US-Vietnamese study
of the A Luoi Valley in Vietnam's central highlands, where Son fought, found
dioxin levels in some breast milk dozens of times higher than maximum levels
recommended by the World Health Organization. Birth defects in local villages
were 1½ to 4 times more frequent than they had been before the war. Dow Chemical and Monsanto maintain that decades of study have failed to
show Agent Orange caused health problems. ''The overwhelming weight of scientific evidence says there's no link
between Agent Orange and serious human illness," said Monsanto spokesman
Glynn Young. The Institute of Medicine, however, says there is strong evidence that
exposure to herbicides is associated with five serious diseases, including
Hodgkin's disease and a form of leukemia. It says there is ''suggestive"
evidence that herbicides might cause birth defects and cancer. While the manufacturers have never acknowledged Agent Orange causes disease,
they reached a $180 million settlement in 1984 with US veterans exposed to
the herbicide. The last payments under that scheme were made in 1997.
Vietnamese were not eligible. The scientific questions will not be at issue tomorrow. The relevant legal
questions are whether the defendants are indemnified as government
contractors, and whether the statute of limitations has expired. Under the US
Alien Tort Claims Act, plaintiffs have 10 years to file their cases. The
Vietnamese say they were unable to file claims in US courts until 1994, when
Washington lifted its trade embargo on Vietnam. |
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