[Ngo-sanrm] Fw: Public Health concerns with AO GMOs in Viet Nam
Sustainable Agriculture and Natural Resources Management Working Group
ngo-sanrm at ngocentre.org.vn
Tue Apr 9 03:30:28 BST 2013
Carol,
I'm sorry I did not see you during your most recent trip to Vietnam. Your
observations about GMOs is correct: there are concerns, but there seems to be a worrisome lack of control and monitoring over various "tests"
that are said to be underway and even wider use of GMO seeds than has been reported officially.
We will add your e-mail address to a couple of relevant lists through the
NGO Resource Center -- the Sustainable Agriculture and Natural Resources Management Working Group (SANRM) and a more specific sub-group on GMOs, and the Agent Orange Working Group (AOWG), both of which circulate
quite a lot of useful information. You will be welcomed to add to the
store of knowledge and information.
Your 2011 CounterPunch article will also be of interest to those in the working groups who may not have been aware of it.
Good to hear from you, keep in touch.
CHUCK
=========================================
CHUCK SEARCY
Project RENEW, International Advisor
Veterans for PeaceChapter 160, Vice President
25 Truong Han Sieu, #302, Hanoi, Vietnam
Mobile: +84 (0) 903 420 769
Email: chucksearcy at yahoo.com
Web: landmines.org.vn
Web: veteransforpeace.org / vfp-vn.ning.com
Skype: chucksearcy
=========================================
From: Carol Miller <carolmiller at newmexico.com>
To: chucksearcy at yahoo.com
Sent: Tuesday, April 9, 2013 4:59 AM
Subject: Public Health concerns with AO GMOs in Viet Nam
Dear Mr. Searcy,
I
met you several years ago during a Global Exchange trip to Vietnam. I
am happy that you commented in the recent New York Times article about
the possible use of GMO seed and their related agricultural chemicals in
Viet Nam.
I am a public health worker with specialization in
Occupational and Environmental Health and have just returned from Viet
Nam, an educational study tour on Palliative Care (end of life, hospice
care). Each hospital we visited was seriously over-crowded, especially
in the cancer wards. While in Viet Nam, I learned of a lot of concern
regarding the decision of the Government of Viet Nam to accept the use
of GMOs.
Among the first GMO crops were seed designed to be
"Round-Up ready," Round-Up being a dangerous herbicide. After only a few
years, super weeds have developed that are immune to Round-Up. Seed has
now been developed to be sprayed with 2-4D, a primary ingredient in
Agent Orange. For me that is enought reason to ban 2-4D forever. However
as a public health worker, I must do what I can to inform AO activists
and to the best of my ability, the Government of Viet Nam about the
special reasons the people, water, soil and environment of Viet Nam
cannot handle any additional 2-4D or related toxic chemicals to be used
in the nation.
Even allegedly safe levels set by agencies like
FDA and EPA - using the standard 150 pound Caucasian male - would not be
safe for use in Viet Nam. Viet Nam has already exceeded any possible
allegedly "safe" level. Three scientific principles combine to ensure a
health disaster with additional 2-4D use in Viet Nam; cumulative
effects, synergistic effects, and a current baseline of exposure that
already exceeds lifetime limits.
Having visited several
orphanages caring for AO victims and training programs for more able AO
victims, I have seen and understand the devastating toll past AO use
will take on Viet Nam into the forseeable future. How will Viet Nam and
the many AO affected people and families ever receive their due
compensation if a related toxin is now welcomed into the country by the
government?
How can we be most effective in reaching out to
governmental leaders in Viet Nam to reject GMOs? Please let me know
where I can volunteer to help with this outreach. Attached is an op-ed i
wrote about remembering the 40th Anniversary of Operation Ranch Hand.
Thank you,
Carol Miller
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