ENDORSED BY VIETNAM VETERANS OF AMERICA, October 2013 and ASSOCIATES OF VIETNAM VETERANS OF AMERICA, June 2014.
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Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts
Monday, October 20, 2014
US, Japan agree on access to bases following environmental incidents
Lack of acceptable protocol over environmental issues has long been a point of contention in Okinawa, the strategic island where about half of all U.S. military personnel in Japan are stationed.
Concerns rose after empty chemical drums excavated on former U.S. military property this year were suspected to contain Agent Orange, a Vietnam War-era defoliant associated with severe health hazards and birth defects. A Japanese government report found no evidence of Agent Orange or local health risk, though it did find common herbicide compounds in the soil.
Source: http://www.stripes.com/news/us-japan-agree-on-access-to-bases-following-environmental-incidents-1.309198
Monday, July 28, 2014
Japanese report: No evidence of Agent Orange in barrels on Okinawa
There is no evidence that dozens of empty chemical drums, unearthed last year on former U.S. military property, contained the toxic defoliant Agent Orange, according to a Japanese government report.
The Okinawa Defense Bureau of the Ministry of Defense tested the final 61 of 83 barrels that were unearthed from land adjacent to the Kadena Air Base fence line. While it found they contained ingredients used in Agent Orange, they were of the incorrect consistency and quantities, leading officials to believe they were to be used as a common herbicide.
Thursday, September 26, 2013
Okinawa Dumpsite Offers Proof of Agent Orange: Experts Say
Two leading Agent Orange specialists have weighed in on the recent discovery of 22 barrels buried on former military land in Okinawa City.1 Richard Clapp, professor emeritus at Boston University School of Public Health, and Wayne Dwernychuk, the scientist previously in charge of identifying defoliant contamination in southeast Asia, likened the levels of dioxin contamination in Okinawa City to dangerous hot-spots in Vietnam where the U.S. military had stored toxic defoliants during the 1960s and ‘70s.2
Both scientists cited the risks to Okinawa residents and urged immediate clean-up of the land to limit the threat to human health. Dwernychuk also noted that the discovery of the barrels may disprove the Pentagon’s repeated denials that military defoliants were ever present on Okinawa.
Continue Learning: http://japanfocus.org/-Jon-Mitchell/3998
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