Berliner Boersenzeitung - The Vietnamese octogenarian fighting for Agent Orange victims

EUR -
AED 3.834305
AFN 70.98687
ALL 97.554921
AMD 407.276164
ANG 1.881775
AOA 952.057564
ARS 1050.919957
AUD 1.616743
AWG 1.879062
AZN 1.774051
BAM 1.948628
BBD 2.108141
BDT 124.770808
BGN 1.954431
BHD 0.393522
BIF 3023.20119
BMD 1.043923
BND 1.407049
BOB 7.241626
BRL 6.05308
BSD 1.044157
BTN 88.028118
BWP 14.264051
BYN 3.416925
BYR 20460.892032
BZD 2.104694
CAD 1.475304
CDF 2996.059619
CHF 0.927849
CLF 0.036932
CLP 1019.08511
CNY 7.557742
CNH 7.587447
COP 4577.34165
CRC 532.141566
CUC 1.043923
CUP 27.663961
CVE 110.081958
CZK 25.302818
DJF 185.526257
DKK 7.459389
DOP 63.05541
DZD 139.534968
EGP 51.795229
ERN 15.658846
ETB 128.871943
FJD 2.383433
FKP 0.823986
GBP 0.833312
GEL 2.850171
GGP 0.823986
GHS 16.381352
GIP 0.823986
GMD 74.118765
GNF 9009.056258
GTQ 8.062328
GYD 218.454396
HKD 8.124775
HNL 26.332988
HRK 7.446574
HTG 137.045633
HUF 409.823057
IDR 16578.124592
ILS 3.803586
IMP 0.823986
INR 88.008299
IQD 1368.061174
IRR 43936.102444
ISK 145.073671
JEP 0.823986
JMD 165.710139
JOD 0.740559
JPY 161.116967
KES 135.188684
KGS 90.601454
KHR 4227.888832
KMF 489.547318
KPW 939.530361
KRW 1469.525299
KWD 0.321299
KYD 0.870131
KZT 521.371204
LAK 22929.769842
LBP 93483.310037
LKR 303.831812
LRD 187.723485
LSL 18.832063
LTL 3.082433
LVL 0.631459
LYD 5.110026
MAD 10.474199
MDL 19.087484
MGA 4884.515948
MKD 61.49218
MMK 3390.621387
MNT 3547.250512
MOP 8.367625
MRU 41.668174
MUR 48.771754
MVR 16.128446
MWK 1812.250306
MXN 21.567712
MYR 4.662682
MZN 66.703187
NAD 18.832419
NGN 1757.05801
NIO 38.374893
NOK 11.640541
NPR 140.845347
NZD 1.797933
OMR 0.401896
PAB 1.044177
PEN 3.964829
PGK 4.144439
PHP 61.595113
PKR 290.158659
PLN 4.309318
PYG 8135.060637
QAR 3.800511
RON 4.977005
RSD 116.964264
RUB 108.588838
RWF 1431.218519
SAR 3.920319
SBD 8.759131
SCR 14.201375
SDG 627.91969
SEK 11.562251
SGD 1.409792
SHP 0.823986
SLE 23.684764
SLL 21890.549611
SOS 596.60465
SRD 37.052985
STD 21607.099729
SVC 9.136376
SYP 2622.887865
SZL 18.832093
THB 36.264319
TJS 11.130563
TMT 3.66417
TND 3.310798
TOP 2.444973
TRY 36.131874
TTD 7.092035
TWD 33.783959
TZS 2766.396264
UAH 43.331029
UGX 3868.761844
USD 1.043923
UYU 44.506204
UZS 13393.532701
VES 48.623811
VND 26536.524258
VUV 123.936644
WST 2.914206
XAF 653.564217
XAG 0.034693
XAU 0.0004
XCD 2.821254
XDR 0.798661
XOF 655.068644
XPF 119.331742
YER 260.902418
ZAR 18.930709
ZMK 9396.565061
ZMW 28.79214
ZWL 336.1428
  • BCC

    8.7200

    152.5

    +5.72%

  • RIO

    0.6300

    62.98

    +1%

  • RBGPF

    0.8100

    61

    +1.33%

  • CMSC

    0.0578

    24.73

    +0.23%

  • GSK

    0.1900

    34.15

    +0.56%

  • AZN

    0.7700

    66.4

    +1.16%

  • NGG

    0.1500

    63.26

    +0.24%

  • SCS

    0.4500

    13.72

    +3.28%

  • BTI

    -0.0500

    37.33

    -0.13%

  • CMSD

    0.1200

    24.58

    +0.49%

  • JRI

    0.1600

    13.37

    +1.2%

  • RELX

    -0.1800

    46.57

    -0.39%

  • BCE

    0.2500

    27.02

    +0.93%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    6.77

    -0.44%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    8.91

    +2.02%

  • BP

    -0.4000

    29.32

    -1.36%

The Vietnamese octogenarian fighting for Agent Orange victims
The Vietnamese octogenarian fighting for Agent Orange victims / Photo: Nhac NGUYEN - AFP

The Vietnamese octogenarian fighting for Agent Orange victims

As a young woman, Tran To Nga was a war correspondent, a prisoner and an activist. Now, at 81, she is waging a court battle against US chemical firms to win justice for the Vietnamese victims of Agent Orange.

Text size:

Nga is the first and only civilian to bring a lawsuit against the 14 multinational chemical firms, including Dow Chemical and Monsanto, that produced and sold the toxic herbicide sprayed over Vietnam by US forces during the war.

According to the World Health Organization, some batches of Agent Orange were contaminated with a dioxin -- a highly toxic environmental pollutant -- that is being investigated for its link to certain types of cancer and to diabetes.

In May 2021, a French court threw Nga's case out. But she refuses to give up.

"I will not stop. I will be on the side of the victims until my last breath," Nga, visiting Hanoi from her home in Paris, told AFP.

"This will be my last fight, and the most difficult of all," said Nga, herself a victim of Agent Orange who spent nine months behind bars, imprisoned by the South Vietnamese regime for her suspected connections to high-ranking communist leaders.

The activist gave birth to her youngest daughter in prison, before being freed when the communists defeated US-backed South Vietnam on April 30, 1975.

- 'I blamed myself' -

Like many other first-generation victims, Nga was at first unaware she had been exposed.

In her mid-20s, she was stationed at a Viet Cong military base near Saigon -- now known as Ho Chi Minh City -- as a trainee journalist working for Hanoi's Liberation News Agency.

Coming out of an underground shelter one day, Nga was "covered with a wet powder from a US aircraft".

"I took a shower only when I was told that it was herbicide all over my body. But then forgot all about it," she said.

Between early 1962 and 1971, US warplanes dropped about 19 million gallons (68 million litres) of Agent Orange -- so-called because it was stored in drums with orange bands -- to defoliate jungles and destroy Viet Cong crops.

At that time, no-one knew they had been exposed to a substance that many believe destroyed not only their lives, but also their children's and grandchildren's.

A year after the exposure, in 1968, Nga gave birth to her first baby, a girl born with a congenital heart defect who survived for just 17 months.

"For so long, I blamed myself for being a bad mother, giving birth to a sick baby and not being able to save her," Nga told AFP.

Nga only suspected her child was a victim of Agent Orange decades later when she encountered veterans and their disabled children in a similar situation.

Vietnam's Association of Victims of Agent Orange says 4.8 million people were directly exposed, and more than three million have developed health problems.

The US Department of Veterans Affairs has said it assumes -- although there is no official scientifically proven link -- that some cancers, diabetes and birth defects are associated with Agent Orange exposure.

It has also recognised a link among veterans' children to spina bifida -- a spine defect in a developing foetus.

Nga herself is suffering from effects including type 2 diabetes and cancer.

"I think of Agent Orange as the ancestor for all sorts of other substances that have destroyed the environment," Nga said.

- No settlement -

At a state-sponsored facility caring for Agent Orange victims in the suburbs of Hanoi, Nga watched a computer lesson given by Vuong Thi Quyen.

Quyen, 34, was born with a deformed spine after her soldier father was exposed during the war.

"I am so happy to meet Nga, my idol. She has done so much for victims of Agent Orange like ourselves," Quyen told AFP.

After the war Nga, a trained chemist, spent many years as a head teacher at a school in Ho Chi Minh City before assuming a role as a go-between for donors in France and Agent Orange victims in Vietnam.

"I have no hatred towards the American government or people. It's only those that caused devastation and pain that should pay for what they did," Nga said.

At the trial in France, the multinationals argued that they could not be held responsible for the way the US military used their product, with the court ruling they had been "acting on the orders of" the United States, and were therefore immune from prosecution.

Nga said she had been offered "a lot of money" to settle the lawsuit, but "I refused to accept".

She has since started a crowdfunding campaign to finance an appeal, scheduled for 2024.

So far, only military veterans from the United States and its allies in the war have won compensation over Agent Orange.

In 2008, a US federal appeals court upheld the dismissal of a civil lawsuit against major US chemical companies brought by Vietnamese plaintiffs.

"The fight to get justice for Agent Orange victims will last a long time," Nga said.

"But I think I have chosen the correct path."

(P.Werner--BBZ)