US takes new move to clean up after Agent Orange
The US has launched a US$183-million cleanup at a former Vietnam storage site for Agent Orange, a toxic defoliant used in the bitter war which years later is still blamed for severe birth defects, cancers and disabilities.
Just outside Ho Chi Minh City, Bien Hoa airbase, the latest site scheduled for rehabilitation after Danang airbase’s cleanup last year‚ was one of the main storage grounds for Agent Orange and only hastily cleared by soldiers near the war’s end more than four decades ago.
US forces sprayed 80 million liters of Agent Orange over then South Vietnam between 1962 and 1971 in a desperate bid to flush out Viet Cong communist guerrillas by depriving them of tree cover and food.
The spillover from the clearing operation is believed to have seeped beyond the base and into ground water and rivers, and is linked to severe mental and physical disabilities across generations of Vietnamese.
At Bien Hoa, more than 500,000 cubic meters of dioxin had contaminated the soil and sediment, making it the “largest remaining hot spot” in Vietnam, said a statement from the US development agency USAID, which kicked off a 10-year remediation effort on Saturday.
The dioxin amounts in Bien Hoa are four times more than the volume cleaned up at Danang airport, a six-year US$110-million effort which was completed in November.
“The fact that two former foes are now partnering on such a complex task is nothing short of historic,” said the US Ambassador to Vietnam Daniel Kritenbrink at Saturday morning’s launch attended by Vietnamese military officials and US senators.
Hanoi says up to 3 million Vietnamese people were exposed to Agent Orange, and that 1 million suffer grave health repercussions today — including at least 150,000 children with birth defects.
An attempt by Vietnamese victims to obtain compensation from the United States has met with little success. The US Supreme Court in 2009 declined to take up the case while neither the US government nor the manufacturers of the chemical have ever admitted liability.
While the US has never admitted direct links between Agent Orange and birth defects, USAID on Saturday also issued a “memorandum of intent” to improve the lives of people with disabilities in seven Vietnamese provinces.
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