America has never taken responsibility for spraying the herbicide over Laos during the Vietnam War. But generations of ethnic minorities have endured the consequences.
It was a blazing-hot morning in October 2019 on the old Ho Chi Minh Trail, an intricate web of truck roads and secret paths that wove its way across the densely forested and mountainous border between Vietnam and Laos. Susan Hammond, Jacquelyn Chagnon and Niphaphone Sengthong forded a rocky stream along the trail and came to a village of about 400 people called Labeng-Khok, once the site of a logistics base inside Laos used by the North Vietnamese Army to infiltrate troops into the South. In one of the bamboo-and-thatch stilt houses, the ladder to the living quarters was made from metal tubes that formerly held American cluster bombs.
The family had a 4-year-old boy named Suk, who had difficulty sitting, standing and walking — one of three children in the extended family with birth defects. A cousin was born mute and did not learn to walk until he was 7. A third child, a girl, died at the age of 2. “That one could not sit up,” their great-uncle said. “The whole body was soft, as if there were no bones.” The women added Suk to the list of people with disabilities they have compiled on their intermittent treks through Laos’s sparsely populated border districts.Hammond, Chagnon and Sengthong
make up the core of the staff of a nongovernmental organization called the War
Legacies Project. Hammond, a self-described Army brat whose father was a senior
military officer in the war in Vietnam, founded the group in 2008. Chagnon, who
is almost a generation older, was one of the first foreigners allowed to work
in Laos after the conflict, representing a Quaker organization, the American
Friends Service Committee. Sengthong, a retired schoolteacher who is Chagnon’s
neighbor in the country’s capital, Vientiane, is responsible for the
record-keeping and local coordination.
The main focus of the War
Legacies Project is to document the long-term effects of the defoliant known as
Agent Orange and provide humanitarian aid to its victims. Named for the colored
stripe painted on its barrels, Agent Orange — best known for its widespread use
by the U.S. military to clear vegetation during the Vietnam War — is notorious
for being laced with a chemical contaminant called
2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-P-dioxin, or TCDD, regarded as one of the most toxic
substances ever created.
No comments:
Post a Comment