Present at the session, Vietnamese Ambassador Nguyen Van Thao briefed the participants on policies, action programs and plans for war victims in Vietnam, as well as the close coordination between Vietnam and the U.S. in settling war consequences.

The handling of AO issues needs international support, he said, lauding the Belgian government and people for their cooperation with and assistance to Vietnam in war legacy settlement and national construction over the past time, through many fruitful programs and projects.

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Vietnamese Ambassador Nguyen Van Thao speaks at the event.

Pierre Gréga, President of the Belgium - Vietnam Friendship Association, who visited the Southeast Asian nation last March, said many Vietnamese children in dioxin-contaminated areas were born with birth defects.

Stressing the importance of the draft resolution, Gréga expressed his hope that it will be passed to facilitate the analysis of dioxin impacts on humans and the environment.

It is the problem of not only Vietnam but also the entire world, he stressed.

Jan Haemers, CEO of Haemers Technologies, said his company has been working with the Vietnamese Ministry of National Defense since 2022 in dioxin remediation in some “hot spots” with the support of the Belgian government. 

André Flahaut, one of the five Belgian parliamentarians who proposed the draft resolution, told the Vietnam News Agency (VNA)’s correspondents in Brussels that he hopes the bill will be adopted this year on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the diplomatic ties between Vietnam and Belgium.

Sharing Flahaut’s view, Chairwoman of the Foreign Affairs Committee under the Belgian Chamber of Representatives Els Van Hoof said the information work should be stepped up to call for international support, especially tech firms, in dioxin cleanup in Vietnam.

Once the draft resolution is approved, the Belgian parliament will be the first European legislature to support the issue, she stressed.

According to the Vietnam Association of Victims of Agent Orange/dioxin (VAVA), the U.S. army sprayed 80 million liters of toxic chemicals on the South of Vietnam between 1961 and 1971, with 61% being AO containing 366kg of dioxin, on over nearly 3.06 million hectares (equivalent to nearly one quarter of the south’s total area).

Preliminary statistics showed that 4.8 million Vietnamese people were exposed to AO/dioxin, and about 3 million people became victims. Tens of thousands of people have died and millions of others suffered from cancer and other incurable diseases as a result. Many of their offsprings also suffer from birth deformities.

Source: VNA