-
Missed penalty spurred 'very angry' Messi to World Cup history
-
Shooting in Montreal, Canada leaves three dead including suspect
-
Oil falls as US waives Iranian sanctions and Nasdaq tumbles
-
Balogun chases 'inevitable' Messi in wild Golden Boot race
-
Belgium's Doku becomes father after World Cup controversy
-
Magic Messi makes World Cup history to send Argentina into last 32
-
French TV presenter stood down over Doku World Cup comments
-
Ghana coach Queiroz says playing England 'easiest' World Cup game
-
Messi sets World Cup scoring record with 17th goal
-
Former Bayern stalwart Demichelis takes over at RB Leipzig
-
Colombian leftist candidate calls for calm after post-vote violence
-
Britons cautiously optimistic after PM's resignation
-
Latest developments in Europe's heatwave
-
Draper makes winning return at Eastbourne with Murray on his side
-
IMF director says Iran war fallout creating 'difficult moment' for Africa
-
Argentina fans defiant, 40 years on from Maradona's 'Hand of God'
-
Hormuz: Traffic flows despite Iran's closure announcement
-
Wikipedia won't let AI edit articles, cofounder says
-
Clive Davis: the starmaker who shaped modern music
-
Uncapped Coles named in England's T20 squad to face India
-
Qatar gas plant blast kills 13, injures dozens
-
Andy Burnham: 'King of the North' eyes Downing Street throne
-
Oil falls as US waives Iranian crude sanctions
-
Dangerous 'heat stress' has surged worldwide, study shows
-
England captain Itoje rested for Nations Championship
-
Interstellar comet likely far older than Solar System: astronomers
-
Antoine Semenyo, Ghana's man on the inside and England threat
-
Man Utd secure land for proposed new 100,000-capacity stadium
-
Two children found dead in car as France faces hottest day of heatwave
-
Two children die in France as heatwave blasts Europe
-
Stokes and Atkinson cleared by Cricket Regulator after nightclub incident
-
Ex-Wimbledon champion Vondrousova banned four years for refusing drugs test
-
Veteran Le Roy named new coach of Congo
-
Milan-Cortina chief Malago elected new head of Italian FA
-
Germany's Schlotterbeck out of World Cup with ankle injury
-
Any unfreezing of Iranian funds will not finance terrorism: Vance
-
Vance hails 'good foundation' for Iran deal after direct talks
-
Alan Greenspan: longtime Fed chief with a divided legacy
-
Leinster boss Cullen to step down at end of next season
-
'Has-been' Belgium stars scorched after Iran World Cup draw
-
Starmer resigns as UK PM, Burnham favourite to take over
-
France, Germany reach deal on arms maker KNDS, paving way for IPO
-
Latest developments on Europe's heatwave
-
France set for hottest day yet of heatwave
-
Keir Starmer: downfall of UK's unpopular PM
-
Gaza's surfers seek solace in the sea
-
MEXC Lists Arcium (ARX) with 70,000 USDT in Airdrop+ Rewards
-
EasyJet rejects £5 bn takeover offer from US equity firm
-
Europe scorched by latest heatwave
-
UK's Starmer resigns as prime minister
The Vietnamese octogenarian fighting for Agent Orange victims
As a young woman, Tran To Nga was a war correspondent, a prisoner and an activist. Now, at 81, she is waging a court battle against US chemical firms to win justice for the Vietnamese victims of Agent Orange.
Nga is the first and only civilian to bring a lawsuit against the 14 multinational chemical firms, including Dow Chemical and Monsanto, that produced and sold the toxic herbicide sprayed over Vietnam by US forces during the war.
According to the World Health Organization, some batches of Agent Orange were contaminated with a dioxin -- a highly toxic environmental pollutant -- that is being investigated for its link to certain types of cancer and to diabetes.
In May 2021, a French court threw Nga's case out. But she refuses to give up.
"I will not stop. I will be on the side of the victims until my last breath," Nga, visiting Hanoi from her home in Paris, told AFP.
"This will be my last fight, and the most difficult of all," said Nga, herself a victim of Agent Orange who spent nine months behind bars, imprisoned by the South Vietnamese regime for her suspected connections to high-ranking communist leaders.
The activist gave birth to her youngest daughter in prison, before being freed when the communists defeated US-backed South Vietnam on April 30, 1975.
- 'I blamed myself' -
Like many other first-generation victims, Nga was at first unaware she had been exposed.
In her mid-20s, she was stationed at a Viet Cong military base near Saigon -- now known as Ho Chi Minh City -- as a trainee journalist working for Hanoi's Liberation News Agency.
Coming out of an underground shelter one day, Nga was "covered with a wet powder from a US aircraft".
"I took a shower only when I was told that it was herbicide all over my body. But then forgot all about it," she said.
Between early 1962 and 1971, US warplanes dropped about 19 million gallons (68 million litres) of Agent Orange -- so-called because it was stored in drums with orange bands -- to defoliate jungles and destroy Viet Cong crops.
At that time, no-one knew they had been exposed to a substance that many believe destroyed not only their lives, but also their children's and grandchildren's.
A year after the exposure, in 1968, Nga gave birth to her first baby, a girl born with a congenital heart defect who survived for just 17 months.
"For so long, I blamed myself for being a bad mother, giving birth to a sick baby and not being able to save her," Nga told AFP.
Nga only suspected her child was a victim of Agent Orange decades later when she encountered veterans and their disabled children in a similar situation.
Vietnam's Association of Victims of Agent Orange says 4.8 million people were directly exposed, and more than three million have developed health problems.
The US Department of Veterans Affairs has said it assumes -- although there is no official scientifically proven link -- that some cancers, diabetes and birth defects are associated with Agent Orange exposure.
It has also recognised a link among veterans' children to spina bifida -- a spine defect in a developing foetus.
Nga herself is suffering from effects including type 2 diabetes and cancer.
"I think of Agent Orange as the ancestor for all sorts of other substances that have destroyed the environment," Nga said.
- No settlement -
At a state-sponsored facility caring for Agent Orange victims in the suburbs of Hanoi, Nga watched a computer lesson given by Vuong Thi Quyen.
Quyen, 34, was born with a deformed spine after her soldier father was exposed during the war.
"I am so happy to meet Nga, my idol. She has done so much for victims of Agent Orange like ourselves," Quyen told AFP.
After the war Nga, a trained chemist, spent many years as a head teacher at a school in Ho Chi Minh City before assuming a role as a go-between for donors in France and Agent Orange victims in Vietnam.
"I have no hatred towards the American government or people. It's only those that caused devastation and pain that should pay for what they did," Nga said.
At the trial in France, the multinationals argued that they could not be held responsible for the way the US military used their product, with the court ruling they had been "acting on the orders of" the United States, and were therefore immune from prosecution.
Nga said she had been offered "a lot of money" to settle the lawsuit, but "I refused to accept".
She has since started a crowdfunding campaign to finance an appeal, scheduled for 2024.
So far, only military veterans from the United States and its allies in the war have won compensation over Agent Orange.
In 2008, a US federal appeals court upheld the dismissal of a civil lawsuit against major US chemical companies brought by Vietnamese plaintiffs.
"The fight to get justice for Agent Orange victims will last a long time," Nga said.
"But I think I have chosen the correct path."
T.Vitorino--PC