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Trade wars: Monsanto’s return to
The Monsanto Co. logo is displayed on a pallet at the Crop Protection
Services (CPS) facility in
This past week, as activists gathered in Washington, D.C. for
the conference on “Vietnam: the Power of Protest,” in Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh
City, a delegation led by Veterans for Peace (VFP) Chapter 160 was quietly
wrapping up a two week tour. The tour was timed to coincide the VFP’s
national “Full Disclosure Campaign”.
The VFP initiative, like the D.C.-based
conference over the weekend, is geared to counter a Department of Defense
(DOD) campaign, funded by the 2008 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA),
to produce commemorative events and historical accounts, including school
curriculum, to mark the 50thanniversary of the Vietnam War.
Set against the backdrop of the Obama
administration’s push for fast track authority to conclude the Trans-Pacific
Partnership (TPP), this year’s VFP 160 tour raised troubling questions not
only about the ongoing effects of the war on Vietnam, but about Monsanto’s
introduction of genetically modified (GMO) seeds onto the Vietnamese market.
The text of the TPP, which would be the
largest trade deal in history, impacting 40 percent of the world’s economy,
remains shrouded in secrecy. But leaked passages indicate
that the TPP will heighten the growing income inequality in both
Monsanto, one of the single largest
producers of the estimated 20 million gallons of Agent Orange sprayed in
Tang Thi Thang
baths her disabled son Doan Van Quy outside their family home in Truc Ly, in
Widespread contamination from the
dioxin-laced defoliant Agent Orange (AO), and a landscape littered with
unexploded ordinance (UXO)—including landmines and cluster bombs—are among
the legacies of what’s known in
One of
many troubling aspects of the Pentagon’s 50th anniversary campaign is its
Orwellian spin on a high tech war that bathed Vietnamese jungles and
waterways in toxic defoliants in one of the largest, most reckless scientific
experiments in human history. Among five objectives outlined in the NDAA is
the mandate that the DOD history celebrate “advances in technology, science
and medicine related to military research conducted during the Vietnam War”.
The leaders of the VFP tour, including
Chapter 160 President Suel Jones, Vice President Chuck Searcy, Don Blackburn,
Chuck Palazzo, and David Clark, all served in the American War in Viet Nam
and each returned, drawn by their memories of the war and their desire to
help support Vietnamese NGOs working to address the suffering engendered by
the war. With the leadership VFP Chapter 160 ranging from their late sixties
to early seventies, the vets anticipate that, at best, they’ll have another
five years to lead the tours, their primary fundraising vehicle to cover
their limited administrative expenses and provide support for their partner
organizations.
The day after we arrived in
After years of legal skirmishes, a 1984
settlement provided limited relief to American GIs suffering from a range of
health effects linked to Agent Orange exposure, from prostate and lung
cancer, to multiple myeloma, diabetes, Parkinsons and heart disease. But
attempts to get legal redress and financial support for the estimated three
million Vietnamese suffering from Agent Orange exposure have repeatedly
failed.
The
On the same day the lawsuit was filed in
Osius told the gathered delegation and
journalists that meaningful political relations between the
Osius vaunted the virtues of the TPP and the
“huge benefits” it will provide for Vietnamese workers, while ostensibly
strengthening environmental protections and regulations that
And he also acknowledged the role that the
TPP will play in privatizing state institutions, which under the terms of the
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the World Trade Organization
(WTO), are frequently relegated to the status of unfair trade barriers.
Under the TPP, he told us, “non-performing
state institutions will,” of course, be subject to elimination. When I challenged
Ambassador Osius’ claims about the benefits of the TPP, invoked the secrecy
of the document and invited him to print out and share a copy of the trade
deal with the delegation to substantiate his claims, he declined
diplomatically.
On our way to visit
Along the edges of
In each city along the path of the tour—from
At a meeting in
At a meeting in
“We appreciate the generosity of the
Vietnamese people,” responded VFP 160 Vice President Chuck Searcy, “But we
also think we should learn the lessons of the past.” Searcy wanted to know
why, after the tragic consequences of Agent Orange, the Vietnamese government
has allowed Monsanto to return, open offices and trade in
If the WTO relegated local and national
environmental and health laws to the status of “unfair trade barriers,”
In
The human health effects caused by the use
of dioxin-contaminated Agent Orange during the American war are most
dramatically evidenced in the
An estimated 15,000 people in Quang Tri
suffer from Agent Orange exposure. Our first encounter with the nearly
unthinkable damage that Agent Orange has wrought in
However, as the Vietnamese are increasingly
discovering, the effects of Agent Orange may skip one generation, only to
emerge in the next. The four disabled adult children are unable to stand
upright as a result of a host of congenital health issues. They scurry about
on all fours, with puzzled expressions that are markers of the developmental
disabilities that frequently result from AO exposure. In
But Agent Orange is far from the only source
of misery that remains in
Another 1,100 amputees are currently
awaiting limbs. Also on display at the Center are crayon drawings by Quang
Tri children learning in school-based programs to identify unexploded
ordinance and notify authorities of the location. More than two million
Vietnamese combatants and civilians were killed during the American War, but
the more than 60,000 Vietnamese killed by land mines, cluster bombs and other
UXO since the war now exceeds the 58,000 American GIs killed during the war.
And still the US remains one of only a handful of countries worldwide which
have refused to sign on to UN treaties banning landmines and cluster bombs.
In Nha Trang, we visited a woman and her
sister who are caring for two adult children, neither of whom registered
signs of AO-exposure until their late teens. The older of the two, now 40,
lay moaning in a bedroom in the rear of the house. His 36- year-old sister is
still cognizant enough to anticipate her own future when she sees his
emaciated and contorted limbs.
In
In another room, a hydrocephalic child of
indeterminate gender with a head the size of a watermelon lay motionless in a
crib. Perched in a chair beside the crib, cradling the child’s hand, sat a
girl who appeared to be no more than six or seven years old. She glanced up
momentarily, a bit annoyed perhaps by the crowd of American spectators
trooping through, then returned to the all-consuming work of comforting her
friend.
The following day, April 30th, the
anniversary in the
Students wave Vietnamese national flags during a military parade as
part of the 40th anniversary of the fall of Saigon in
The
reception that followed in the “
As Phuc noted, Luc “support[ed] and
assist[ed] the Vietnamese delegation” at the Peace Talks, while serving as a
member of the Paris City Council. In her comments, Luc invoked Ho Chi Minh’s
historic 1945 Declaration of Independence, modeled after the founding
document of the
Last to speak when the floor opened up was
Virginia Foote, President of the US-Vietnam Trade Council and President of
the Board of the International Center in Washington, D.C. “As an American–and
I think I speak for all of the Americans in the room,” observed Foote, “we
pledge to continue to work on the economic development of the country” as
well as “on the war legacy issues.”
She spoke of attending the ground-breaking
ceremony at the
On April 30th in the
Amid new initiatives to secure justice for
Agent Orange survivors and ongoing negotiations for a trade deal that stands
to significantly shape the future of both countries, the corporate controlled
media in the
Leaked passages indicate that, if passed,
TPP will expand the impunity and profits of corporations like Monsanto that
seem every bit as willing today as they were in the 1960s to profit from the
misery of Vietnamese peasants and the working poor in both countries.
Meanwhile, in
By Desiree Hellegers, Thanh Nien News
Republished with permission from Desiree Hellegers and CounterPunch (www.counterpunch.org)
Desiree Hellegers is a board member of Portland Peace and Justice Works/Copwatch, an associate professor of English at Washington State University Vancouver, and the author of No Room of Her Own: Women’s Stories of Homelessness, Life Death and Resistance (Palgrave MacMillan). The opinions expressed are her own.
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Chủ Nhật, 10 tháng 5, 2015
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