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Apr-19-2014 16:16TweetFollow @OregonNews Wartime Ordnance Explosion Severely Injures Ethnic Coffee Farmer Near Former U.S. Marine Base at Khe SanhChuck Searcy for Salem-News.comThey face lethal threats every day.
(WASHINGTON DC) - The Mine Action Alert below has already been circulated to a number of lists, so apologies for any duplication. This is a tragic reminder that unexploded ordnance is still taking casualties in Vietnam 40 years after the war, and why Project RENEW's work remains important. Some basic knowledge of how to deal with the situation this young farmer encountered could have saved his hand. We have not found the funds to expand Project RENEW's risk education and explosive ordnance response units into the Khe Sanh area, so the risk in that area is still great. We are pleased that in RENEW's area of operations our efforts are showing results. When the project began in 2001, there were about 50 accidents a year in the four districts of Quang Tri Province where we launched Project RENEW. In the past year, there was one accident. That's still too many. Our goal is to reduce accidents, injuries, and deaths to zero. A visit this week of Senators Patrick Leahy, Mike Crapo, Dick Shelby, and Congressmen Jim Cooper and Peter Welch, offered some encouragement that the U.S. Congress may finally put up significant funds to "get the job done" in Vietnam -- that is, to make Vietnam safe from the dangers of unexploded ordnance, and within a reasonable period of time, say five to 10 years. It can be done, with the political will and sufficient financial resources (and far less money than the U.S. has spent in a given month in Iraq or Afghanistan!). We owe it to 21-year-old farmers who were born long after the war ended, their families, their children who are still living with the consequences of a war that ended for the U.S. in 1975. The war has not ended for them. They face lethal threats every day. As an American citizen, and a Vietnam vet, I feel a strong responsibility for the U.S. to finally step up and do the right thing. It's been 40 years, and more than 100,000 casualties. Injuries to Lay’s right hand were so severe that doctors had to amputate it. Lay’s other hand was shattered by the blast. Photo by Project RENEW. Lay’s brother Linh, like other coffee growers, had general knowledge of the type of UXO that injured Lay. Linh guessed it was an M79. However, the two brothers had never been exposed to rigorous Risk Education, to teach them exactly what steps to take to be safe and how to report the finding so a qualified EOD team can come and safely dispose of dangerous items. During the past five years, at least six coffee farmers have been injured by UXO in Huong Tan Commune alone. In the same village of Tram, an explosion in February 2010 wounded four young men while they were weeding at a coffee plantation. In October 2012 a 17-year-old boy lost his leg while planting coffee in in Ruong Village. ============================== Project RENEW Restoring the Environment and Neutralizing the Effects of the War Dự án Phục hồi Môi trường và Khắc phục Hậu quả Chiến tranh Project RENEW Coordination Office Kids First Village, 185 Ly Thuong Kiet Street, Dong Ha City, Quang Tri Province, Vietnam 053 3858 445 tel / 053 3858 442 fax projectrenewvietnam@gmail.com / www.landmines.org.vn Ngo Xuan Hien, Communications & Development Manager, 0915 352 565 mobile Email: ngoxuanhien@gmail.com
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Anonymous April 21, 2014 7:03 am (Pacific time)
The vast majority of illegal explosive bobby-traps going back to when the French were in Vietnam up to the present, were put in by communist forces. One can simply dig one up and see most were manufactured in either the Soviet Union or China, sometimes other places like North Korea. Hey get Phil Knight of Nike to go over and clear them. He sure didn't give a rip about American P.O.W."s. Go to hell Phil Knight.
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