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Aug 21, 2011 / 13:44

Vietnam-US AO group makes field trip

The The Vietnam-US Dialogue Group o­n Agent Orange/dioxin made a field trip to the heavily AO-contaminated province of Dong Nai province o­n August 17 as part of a survey for a project to build centres o­n reproductive health and rehabilitation.

The Hanoitimes - The The Vietnam-US Dialogue Group o­n Agent Orange/dioxin made a field trip to the heavily AO-contaminated province of Dong Nai province o­n August 17 as part of a survey for a project to build centres o­n reproductive health and rehabilitation.


The group was seeking funding for the construction of a reproductive health consultancy centre and a rehabilitation centre for AO/dioxin victims in Dong Nai province’s Dinh Quan district, said Dr Nguyen Ngoc Phuong, a group member.

Apart from attracting donations, Dr Phuong will help train doctors and medical workers for the centres, with the aim of providing them with knowledge o­n how to provide consultancy and treatment for AO/dioxin victims.

At a working session with the Dong Nai Association of AO/dioxin Victims, Vu Hai Ha, member of the National Assembly’s Committee for External Relations and the group, handed over 700 million VND donated by businesses and organisations.

Dong Nai was o­ne of localities most heavily affected by Agent Orange/dioxin, with over 10 million litres of the toxic chemical sprayed o­n half of the province’s area. As many 13,147 local people were exposed and 8,000 are suffering from health problems due to the exposure.

In the 1961-1971 period, US troops sprayed 80 million litres of chemical defoliants containing nearly 400kg of dioxin o­n Vietnam , according to the Vietnam Association of Victims of Agent Orange /dioxin.

As many as 4.8 million Vietnamese people were exposed to dioxin, of whom 3 million suffered from health problems due to the exposure.

Established in 2007, the Vietnam-US Dialogue Group has worked to raise awareness among the US authorities and people, and encourage US and international communities to make more contributions to solving AO/dioxin consequences for Vietnam’s environmental and human health.