http://peoplesworld.org/vietnam-urges-u-s-to-act-on-agent-orange-clean-up/
by: Pepe Lozano
September 13 2009
US funding promised to help clean up an airport contaminated by the
wartime herbicide Agent Orange has not been disbursed fast enough,
said a Vietnam official Sep. 8.
Vice Minister of Natural Resources and Environment Nguyen Xuan Cong
made the remarks at the annual meeting of the United States-Vietnam
Joint Advisory Committee on Agent Orange in Hanoi.
The two sides have met every year since 2006 to review cooperation
between the two countries in the past years dealing with consequences
of the poisonous chemical. The committee aims to discuss concrete
measures and project solutions to deal with the problem.
For 10 years, U.S. forces sprayed Agent Orange and other herbicides
on 10 percent of the land surface of South Vietnam, in an effort to
destroy crops and deny Vietnam soldiers cover under the country's
dense foliage.
A byproduct of Agent Orange, the most commonly used defoliant, was
the highly toxic chemical dioxin. Dioxin has long been linked to
several forms of cancer, adult-onset diabetes, and birth defects. The
Institute of Medicine recently found evidence of an association
between exposure to Agent Orange and the most deadly form of heart
disease and Parkinson's disease.
Vietnam says up to four million of its citizens have suffered serious
health consequences because of the poisonous spraying by U.S forces
during the war.
Many babies of soldiers exposed to Agent Orange have been born with
terrible birth defects, says Vietnam.
"We all know that exposure to dioxin is the cause of serious
suffering to the victims," said Cong.
Cong added the U.S. should speed up disbursement of money to help the
disabled, and that help is not coming quick enough.
"The committed funds from the U.S. government have not been
disbursed," said Cong.
Cong said a joint task force on decontaminating the Danang airport,
where U.S. forces stored Agent Orange and loaded it onto warplanes
during the conflict, "has not met our expectations."
Vietnam estimates that cleaning Danang and two other most
contaminated Agent Orange hot spots alone will cost $58 million. At
Vietnam's request, the U.S. is focusing its assistance on Danang. So
far, the U.S. has set aside $8 million to deal with environmental and
health issues linked to Agent Orange.
There are as many as two-dozen hot spots that need cleaning up, says Vietnam.
The two countries have taken temporary steps to contain dioxin at the
Danang site and are seeking ways to remove the poison from the soil.
Both sides are also working on joint efforts to assist disabled
Vietnamese whose health problems are results of the chemical.
In the past the U.S. and Vietnam have disagreed about the likely
consequences of Agent Orange exposure, yet the two sides through the
joint committee have agreed to work together to help Vietnamese who
have disabilities, regardless of the cause.
U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam Michael Michalak said at the meeting that
the U.S. had begun implementing three health projects serving people
with disabilities near the Danang airport. He added that bids have
been received and a contract will soon be announced for an
environmental assessment and remediation preparatory work at the airport.
In June both sides began testing "bioremediation," the use of
biological organisms to destroy dioxin at the Danang airport, said
Michalak. "If successful, bioremediation will provide an innovative
and cost effective dioxin remediation solution," he said.
A joint study in Danang found dioxin levels were 300 to 400 times
higher than internationally accepted limits.
Non-profit groups and international donors have contributed funds to
the cause but much more is needed, says Vietnam. Vietnam is urging
that the U.S. establish long-term projects to deal with the human
suffering of Agent Orange victims.
The U.S. argues there has been no internationally-accepted scientific
study establishing a link between Agent Orange and Vietnam's disabled
and deformed.
However critics are urging the U.S. take responsibility of the
consequences and help remedy the problem. Only grudgingly has the
U.S. government acknowledged that the many herbicide-linked diseases
in its own veterans stemmed from years serving in Vietnam, they
charge. The U.S. has been even less forthcoming in helping Vietnam
deal with the legacy of Agent Orange, they add. Congress, critics
say, must increase the U.S. commitment to do justice to this
continuing environmental and health disaster.
.
1 comment:
The VA has added some diseases to its list of diseases presumed to be caused by Agent Orange exposure: Parkinson's disease, B cell leukemias, iischemic heart disease. If a Vietnam Vet applied for benefits based on the claim that Agent Orange caused him/her to suffer one of these diseases and was denied, there is a really good chance the claim would be approved now if they reapply. We can help: http://veterans-benefits-denial.com/.
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