New  Zealand  supplied  Agent  Orange  chemicals  to  the
United  States  military  during   the  Vietnam   war,  a
government minister has revealed.
The disclosure led to immediate  claims that  New Zealand
was in breach of the Geneva convention  and could  face a
flood of lawsuits from veterans and Vietnamese.
Transport Minister Harry Duynhoven said the  highly toxic
chemical  was  sent  to  a  United  States  base  in  the
Philippines during the 1960s.
"The  information  that  has  been  given  to me  is that
products used to make Agent Orange were shipped  from New
Plymouth to Subic  Bay in the  Philippines," he  told the
Sunday News newspaper.
After  nearly  three  decades  of  official   denials,  a
high-level parliamentary committee  formally acknowledged
late last year that New Zealand  soldiers in  the Vietnam
War were  significantly exposed to  Agent Orange,  but no
mention was ever made that the country was a supplier.
Some  New Zealand veterans  are seeking  compensation for
chronic illnesses suffered by them and their families.
Although  the  National  Party  was  in power  during the
Vietnam   War,   Duynhoven   said   his   current  Labour
government  was  responsible   for  setting   the  record
straight.
"Any government has to deal with  the situation  it finds
itself  in  and  it's  always   a  problem   if  previous
governments leave a mess."
From 1961 to 1971, the US  and South  Vietnamese military
sprayed  millions of litres  of toxic  herbicides, mainly
Agent   Orange,  over  South   Vietnam  to   destroy  the
vegetation used by communist forces for cover and food.
Hanoi says the defoliant has  caused health  problems for
more than  one million Vietnamese  and continues  to have
devastating consequences.
A study released in August last  year by  scientists from
the United States, Germany and  Vietnam found  that Agent
Orange  was  still  contaminating  people  through  their
food.
Dioxin,  the defoliant's deadly  component, can  cause an
increased    risk    of    cancers,   immunodeficiencies,
reproductive  and  developmental changes,  nervous system
problems and other health  effects, according  to medical
experts.
So much for a country who stated publicly to be closed to the protection of nature, one entire part of the Asia Pacific community, and who lectured other nations on human rights...
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