On January 31, 2004, Vietnam Agent Orange/Dioxin Victims Association (VAVA) and 3 victims, Phan Thi Phi Phi, Nguyen Van Quy and Duong Quynh Hoa, filed a lawsuit against the US Chemical Companies for manufacturing toxic chemicals and supplying them to the US Army for use in the war of aggression against Vietnam. The suit was filed at the US Federal Court in Brooklyn County (New York) which had once tried the US Vietnam Veterans’ case against the US Chemical Companies for compensation.
On January 31, 2004, Vietnam Agent Orange/Dioxin Victims
Association (VAVA) and 3 victims, Phan Thi Phi Phi, Nguyen Van Quy and Duong
Quynh Hoa, filed a lawsuit against the US Chemical Companies for manufacturing
toxic chemicals and supplying them to the US Army for use in the war of
aggression against Vietnam. The suit was filed at the US Federal Court in
Brooklyn County (New York) which had once tried the US Vietnam Veterans’ case
against the US Chemical Companies for
compensation.nbsp;nbsp;
Procedure of the Agent Orange/Dioxin case
On June 29 – July
14, 2004 a 7-member team of American lawyers arrived in Vietnam, worked with
Vietnam Agent Orange/Dioxin Victims Association and met with some of the victims
to make supplements to the dossier. The lawyers’ visit was a great sucess,
helping them complete the file and see with their own eyes the victims’ awful
physical and mental sufferings.nbsp;
At 11 am. on
February 28, 2005, the lawyers of the both sides (the plaintiff and the
defendant) proceeded with their arguments at court, starting the adjudication of
the Agent Orange/Dioxin case.
Less than 10 days
after the public hearings for the Vietnam Agent Orange/Dioxin case at the US
Federal Court in Brooklyn County (New York), on March 11 the Chief Judge Jack B.
Weinstein abruptly ruled out the case for reason that the US Army’s use of
defoliants manufactured and supplied by the US Chemical Companies in the Vietnam
war had not been prohibited by the US legislation and international law, as
ofnbsp; early April 1975, the US Administration had not banned the use of toxic
chemicals, while the country had not been a signatory to any international
instrument related to this issue. Lawyer William H. Goodman, a member of the
lawyers’ league
representingnbsp; the Vietnam Agent Orange/Dioxin victims, asserted that Judge
Weinstein made “a basic and evident error” when ruling that the Agent Orange was
not toxic. Lawyer Goodman said he nbsp;would lodge an appeal and believed the
case could only be ruled by a US Supreme Court. In the meantime, Lawyer Jonathan
Moore, representative of the plaintiff’s lawyers league, has pledged to pursue
the case to the end together with other American lawyers, in order to bring
justice to the Vietnam Agent Orange/Dioxin victims.
On April 8, 2005
the lawyers’ team representing the Vietnamese Agent Orange/Dioxin victims lodged
an appeal to the US Federal Court in region 2 in New York and dismissed the
verdict on March 10 by Chief Judge Weinstein of the US Federal Court in Brooklyn
County (New York)nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;
Responses to the verdict by the US Federal
Court
nbsp;Le Dung, Spokesman of the
Vietnamese Ministry of Foreign Affairs:
“The Vietnamese people are utterly discontented at the March
10, 2005 verdict by the US Federal Court in Brooklyn County (New York). Whatever
verdict can never change the fact that the toxic Agent Orange/Dioxin used by the
US Army in the Vietnam War has wrought extremely heavy consequences on the
people and environment of Vietnam. More than 40 years has elapsed but it has
kept seriously affecting the Vietnamese socio-economic life, which has been
re-affirmed by the researches conducted by quite a few Vietnamese and American
scientists. Millions of Agent Orange/Dioxin victims have been suffering from
deadly diseases and dozens of thousands of children of their younger generations
continued to be born with inherent deformities, leading an arduous material
life, with wretched physical and mental misery. The lawsuit lodged by the
Vietnamese Agent Orange/Dioxin victims against the US Chemical Companies for
their manufacture of Agent Orange/Dioxin is justifiable. The chemical firms that
manufactured the toxin should take responsibility for all Agent Orange/Dioxin
victims, not only the American Vietnam Veterans but the victims in Vietnam as
well…”
Vietnam Fatherland
Front strongly protests against the verdict by the Agent Orange/Dioxin
court:
The Presidium of the
Vietnam Fatherland Front Central Committee has issued a statement protesting
against the erroneous verdict on the Vietnamese Agent Orange/Dioxin victims’
case. The statement clearly points out:
“The Presidium of
the Vietnam Fatherland Front Central Committee vehemently protests against the
aforesaid verdict by the US Federal Court in Brooklyn County (New York) because
it is completely immoral and unjust, ignoring the world people’s progressive
opinion on human rights to live and to enjoy vital interests. The verdict can
never cover up, conceal nor change the fact that the toxic Agent Orange/Dioxin
used by the US Army in its war of aggression against Vietnam has wrought
extremely serious consequences on the Vietnamese people and environment. Vietnam
Fatherland Front earnestly and urgently calls upon the governments, the
international organizations, the NGOs, the scientists, the social activists and
people of the world, particularly the Americans, to raise their voices against
this erroneous verdict by the US Federal Court in Brooklyn County, and step up
their activities in support of the Vietnamese Agent Orange/dioxin victims and
their lawsuit, for peace and justice.”
Statement by Vietnam
Agent Orange/Dioxin Victims Association (VAVA):
“This is an absurd, abnormal and
unjust verdict. It is absurd because as early as the 1990s, the US Academy of
Sciences and the US Faculty of Medicine already acknowledged the Agent Orange as
a catalyst to 13 diseases and ailments on the human body.nbsp; In 1996,
President Bill Clinton had to make his apologies, acknowledging some more
diseases and giving instructions to the US Secretary for Veterans to elaborate
policies for compensation to American Vietnam veterans infected with Agent
Orange/Dioxin. This verdict rejects millions of Vietnamese victims’ right to
compensation for their lives and injuries caused by the devastating
after-effects of the Agent Orange/Dioxin and abets the crime of manufacturing
and utilizing toxic chemicals to inflict on the Vietnamese victims untold
heart-rending sufferings and losses.”
Vietnam Agent
Orange/Dioxin Victims Association (VAVA) vows to keep promoting the case till
the triumph of justice, not only for the lives of the Vietnamese Agent
Orange/Dioxin victims, but for the legitimate interests of all Agent
Orange/Dioxin victims in many other countries, including the US.
Story: Vuong
Mo