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Agent Orange Legacy Scourges Vietnam

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Agent Orange Legacy Scourges Vietnam | The Diplomat

Agent Orange Legacy Scourges Vietnam
Decades after the Vietnam War, victims wither away with scant efforts being made to tackle the deadly chemicals.

By Sean Kimmons
July 04, 2014

DA NANG, Vietnam – The frail bodies of Toan La and his brother sat paralyzed against a wall to prop up their crooked spines, one of many ailments thought to be inherited from their grandfather’s exposure to Agent Orange – a toxic herbicide widely used during the Vietnam War.

Born normal, the Vietnamese brothers grew mysteriously weak as young children and their health has since decayed from a crippling neuromuscular disorder.

Now aged 18 and 22, they are nearly immobile and spend much of their lives stuck inside one room, watching their muscles wither away.

“I am like a baby. I cannot move, take care of myself or do anything that I want,” said Toan, the oldest brother. “I feel that life is so meaningless and I have no more purpose.”

Roughly three million people including 150,000 children born with birth defects have been affected by Agent Orange, according to the Vietnam Red Cross.

As a result, the country’s rate of birth defects has quadrupled after the controversial war.

From 1961 to 1971, the U.S. military sprayed almost 20 million gallons of Agent Orange and similar noxious chemicals over almost a quarter of southern Vietnam to strip foliage and deny communist fighters cover.

Activists claim it was the largest chemical warfare campaign ever conducted.

“The consequences that it left behind are the most severe in the history of mankind,” said Ha Thi Mac, one of the deputy directors for the Vietnam Association of Victims of Agent Orange/Dioxin (VAVA).

Dioxin, a key ingredient in the herbicides, is linked to a myriad of reproductive and development issues as well as other severe health problems in Vietnamese people and U.S. veterans who served in the war.

The deadly substance can have a lifespan of more than 100 years and still pollutes food and water sources, researchers say.

Despite the evidence, the “U.S. government has never accepted responsibility for the damage it caused to the people and the environments in Vietnam,” Mac said.

Lingering Aftermath

While dodging blame for its destruction, the U.S. has agreed to help clean up the Da Nang airport where large stockpiles of Agent Orange were stored during the war.

The move came as both nations looked to tighten relations as part of the U.S. pivot to offset Chinese influence in the region.

In April, the $84 million project slated to finish in 2016 officially began to treat tainted soil around the airport, now a bustling international travel hub.

Plans are also underway to assess the worst polluted site at Bien Hoa airbase near Ho Chi Minh City, which has three times more contaminated soil.

But dozens of other toxic “hotspots” across the country remain untouched and it is not yet known if similar multimillion dollar projects will occur.

The U.S. government also launched a three-year, $9 million project in 2012 to support disabled people regardless of their condition, officials say.

Agent Orange victims are not openly targeted with the funds.

The reason is that “the extent of exposure to dioxin due to Agent Orange among the Vietnamese people and the link between such exposure and particular [health] effects is uncertain,” Spencer Cryder, spokesperson for the U.S. Embassy in Hanoi, said.

Yet the U.S. government recognizes 15 diseases and birth defects used to compensate an estimated 250,000 American vets exposed to Agent Orange. In 2010, the U.S. Congress set aside $13.4 billion to cover these costs.

The Aspen Institute, an international think tank that has studied the ongoing crisis in Vietnam, urged the U.S. to pay the bulk of a proposed $450 million plan over 10 years to clean hotspots, restore ruined ecosystems, and boost services to victims and their families.

Currently only around 200,000 victims receive $20 monthly subsidies by the Vietnamese government, not enough for loved ones to care of them.

Families often have several sick relatives over multiple generations due to the genetic damage caused by dioxin, advocates say.

“It’s a pretty sad situation to see what has happened to entire families because of Agent Orange,”said Mark Conroy, senior advisor for East Meets West, a regional non-profit. “It’s frustrating not being able to get funding to help these victims.”

A casualty of its own economic success, Vietnam has seen foreign donors vanish after it emerged as a lower middle-income country in 2009.

“At the end of the day, it will have to come down to the Vietnamese government paying attention to them because [foreign donors] are not going to do it forever,” said Conroy, whose group once assisted victims up until 2010 when funds dried up.

To take matters into their own hands, Vietnamese victims filed a lawsuit in 2004 to hold chemical companies, mainly Dow Chemical and Monsanto, responsible for producing the dioxin-laced herbicides.

The same federal judge, who earlier ordered the companies to pay a $180 million settlement for affected U.S. vets in 1984, dismissed the case arguing that the U.S. government contractors had immunity. The Supreme Court denied a petition to hear the case in 2009.

‘A Life Imprisonment’

Just south of this central Vietnam city is a small orphanage, home to several deformed children discarded by their parents.

Inside, a toddler with a curved spine that bends grotesquely backward is seen lying next to a sick child with an enlarged head.

Nearby, a mentally challenged boy is tethered to a wall for his safety while another one sits confused in an unpadded metal crib. Behind them, a paralyzed boy with a skeletal frame whimpers as flies crawl over him.

Despite the varying ailments, it is believed that Agent Orange is their common culprit.

Like countless others, these orphans may be trapped in a life of wasting away since Vietnam lacks early intervention for birth defects and physical therapy to recover damaged bodies, advocates say.

“Their living standards are difficult and they are the poorest among the poor in our society,” VAVA’s Mac said of most victims. “Many of them are not capable of being self-reliant.”

For those who are not bedridden, VAVA and other non-profit groups offer education and vocational training from basic hygiene to computer skills that allow victims to be independent and relieve some of the burden on their families.

But programs are underfunded and reach fewer than 10 percent of those in need.

“Funding is not always stable,” Dinh Van Tuyen, vice director of the Friendship Village, a boarding school for 120 affected youth in Hanoi. “There is financial support for Agent Orange victims but it is not enough to improve their lives.”

Children who only suffer from less serious disorders can be helped at the village, he said.

As for the rest including Toan and his brother, the outlook remains bleak if they can ever be liberated from their maladies.

“If this was a death sentence, it would be better,” Toan said. “But this pain still exists and I deal with it on a daily basis.”

“It’s like a life imprisonment.”

Sean Kimmons is a freelance reporter/photographer based in Thailand who has reported on political instability and violence in the Iraq War, the Golden Triangle illicit drug trade and the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Southeast Asia, among many other topics.

thediplomat_2014-07-04_06-52-38.jpg

Alongside his brother, Toan La, 22, is given a drink by his mother. Both brothers suffer from a severe neuromuscular disorder that is believed to be caused by Agent Orange.
Image Credit: Sean Kimmons
 
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Poor souls. There are hardly anything we can do to help them. And the law suits with US firms are still stuck up.

I would nicely ask no one makes jokes about agent orange. It's terrible and inhumane to do so.
 
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2008 Chinese milk scandal

By November 2008, China reported an estimated 300,000 victims,[1] with six infants dying from kidney stones and other kidney damage, and an estimated 54,000 babies being hospitalised.[2][3] The chemical appeared to have been added to milk to cause it to appear to have a higher protein content. In a separate incident four years before, watered-down milk had resulted in 13 infant deaths from malnutrition.[4] ....

Victims
On 17 September 2008, Health Minister Chen Zhu stated tainted milk formula had "sickened more than 6,200 children, and that more than 1,300 others, mostly newborns, remain hospitalised with 158 suffering from acute kidney failure".[25] By 23 September, about 54,000 children were reported to be sick and four had died.[26] An additional 10,000 cases were reported from the provinces by 27 September.[27] A World Health Organisation official said 82% of the children made ill were 2 years of age or below.[28] The Hong Kong Centre for Food Safety said that 99% of the victims were aged under 3 years.[29] Ten Hong Kong children were diagnosed with kidney problems,[30] at least four cases were detected in Macau,[31] and six in Taiwan.[32] Non-human casualties included a lion cub and two baby orangutans which had been fed Sanlu milk powder at Hangzhou Zoo.[33]

The government said on 8 October it would no longer issue updated figures "because it is not an infectious disease, so it's not absolutely necessary for us to announce it to the public."[34] Reuters compiled figures reported by local media across the country, and said the toll stood at nearly 94,000 at the end of September, excluding municipalities. Notably, 13,459 children had been affected in Gansu, Reuters quoted Xinhua saying. ffected infants, the New England Journal of Medicine printed an editorial in March 2009, along with reports on cases from Beijing, Hong Kong and Taipei.
[39]

Urinary calculi speHenan had reported over 30,000 cases, and Hebei also had nearly 16,000 cases.[35]


In late October, the government announced health officials had surveyed 300,000 Beijing families with children of less than 3 years of age. It disclosed approximately 74,000 families had a child who had been fed melamine-tainted milk, but did not reveal how many of those children had fallen ill as a result.[36]

Due to the many months before the scandal was exposed, the media suggest the official figures are likely to be understated. Kidney stones in infants started being reported in several parts of China in the past two years. A number of yet to be officially acknowledged cases were reported on by the media. However, those deaths without an official verdict may be denied compensation.[37] On 1 December, Xinhua reported that the Ministry of Health revised the number of victims to more than 290,000 and 51,900 hospitalised; authorities acknowledged receiving reports of 11 suspected deaths from melamine contaminated milk powder from provinces, but officially confirmed 3 deaths.[38]

On characterisation and treatment of urinary stones in acimens were collected from 15 cases treated in Beijing and were analysed as unknown objects for their components at Beijing Institute of Microchemistry using infrared spectroscopy, nuclear magnetic resonance, and high performance liquid chromatography. The result of the analyses showed the calculi were composed of melamine and uric acid, and the molecular ratio of uric acid to melamine was around 2:1.[40]

In a study published in 2010, researchers from Peking University studying ultrasound images of infants who fell ill in the 2008 contamination found while most children in a rural Chinese area recovered, 12% still showed kidney abnormalities six months later. "The potential for long-term complications after exposure to melamine remains a serious concern," the report said. "Our results suggest a need for further follow-up of affected children to evaluate the possible long-term impact on health, including renal function."[41]

2008 Chinese milk scandal - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

CHINA_Children_Melamine_Milk.jpg

CHINA Father who lost child to melamine-tainted milk gets a year of hard labour - Asia News

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Powdered milk - Latest news, videos, and information- NBCNews.com

 
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Fighting against US is too hard, China will get the same if they dare to take back TW .
At least finally we won when China still divided into 2 parts:pop:
No need to try to save face. Everyone knows your dirty mind, willing to suck up to anyone for your own interest even if that country **** your country up pretty badly in the past. This is the difference between you and us. We forgive but never forget.
 
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No need to try to save face. Everyone knows your dirty mind, willing to suck up to anyone for your own interest even if that country **** your country up pretty badly in the past. This is the difference between you and us. We forgive but never forget.
Oh really, u sucked JP @$$ like a vaccum for some cheap yen in 1978 despite JP treated u even worse than cockroaches, forget it ?? :lol:
 
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Oh really, u sucked JP @$$ like a vaccum for some cheap yen in 1978 despite JP treated u even worse than cockroaches, forget it ?? :lol:
We never seek to ally with Japan. Fact. We seek mutual economic benefit with Japan. Fact. Truth hurts.
 
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We never seek to ally with Japan. Fact. We seek mutual economic benefit with Japan. Fact. Truth hurts.
We dont seek to ally with any one now .

So, if big China suck small JP like a vaccum in 1978, then dont try to mock other small countries when they seek for support from other nations.
 
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