Some participants in the roundtable talk in HCM City on May 8 (Photo: VNA)
HCM City (VNA) – Participants in a May 8 roundtable talk,
including Vietnamese-French woman Tran To Nga, who is pursuing a lawsuit against the US companies that provided the chemical
toxins used by the US army during the war in Vietnam, affirmed the resolve to
continue the fight for justice for Agent Orange (AO)/ dioxin victims of Vietnam
regardless of the court’s rulings.
The talk in Ho Chi Minh City was among activities of a
project calling for support for Nga’s legal action. She attended the event from France via videoconferencing.
After the lawsuit against the
US chemical companies filed by the Vietnam Association for Victims of AO (VAVA)
in 2004 had not ended with a desired result, Nga, born in 1942, sued these firms in the Crown Court of France’s Evry city in 2014.
The court opened a hearing
on this case on January 25 this year and is expected to issue the verdict on May
10.
Nga graduated from a Hanoi
university in 1966 and became a war correspondent of the Liberation News
Agency. She worked in some of the most heavily
AO/dioxin affected areas in southern Vietnam, such as Cu Chi, Ben Cat, and
along the Ho Chi Minh Trail, ultimately experiencing contamination herself.
Of her three children, the first died of heart
defects and the second suffers from a blood disease. She has also contracted a
number of acute diseases.
With the support of several
non-governmental organisations, she accused the companies of causing lasting
harm to the health of herself, her children, and countless others, and of
destroying the environment.
Talking via
videoconference, Nga, who is currently in France, said regardless of the
rulings to be issued by the court, the 10-year struggle will still continue,
noting that she and her friends have been prepared to keep going for many more
years.
The strength of justice and
the truth will win, she stated.
Used to be a plaintiff in
the VAVA’s 2004 lawsuit in the US, VAVA Vice President Nguyen Thi Ngoc Phuong
said though the previous lawsuit did not come to a success, it has left a great impact on the people in the US and the world as a whole.
The fight for justice will
continue, she went on, expressing her belief in final victory. She stressed that this is a historic
lawsuit and its win will become a legal precedent for AO/dioxin victims in
Vietnam and other countries to seek justice for themselves.
Truong Trong Nghia, Vice
Chairman of the Vietnam Bar Federation, pointed out that compared to the 2004
lawsuit in the US, Nga’s lawsuit has certain advantages, elaborating that the French
court on January 25 announced that it has the power and legal ground to deal
with this case.
Besides, a recent lawsuit against
a chemical company filed by a farm worker who was exposed to herbicide in
France ended in the worker’s favour. This precedent is favourable for Nga’s
case.
People in France also
support and hope that Nga will win in her lawsuit, Nghia added.
Ton Nu Thi Ninh, Vice
President of the Vietnam Peace Committee and President of the HCM City Peace
and Development Foundation, stressed the must for persistence since the purpose
is not only to seek compensation but also to force the US side to admit the truth
and its responsibility.
So far, more than 4 million
Vietnamese people have been exposed to AO/dioxin while 100,000 children have
suffered from deformities. The AO causes lasting harms to humans and the
environment. Scientists found that this substance not only affects the ones
exposed to it but also many following generations, depending on its
concentration in the body, according to Vu Thi Quyen, a lecturer in biology at
the Van Lang University./.