|
Len Aldis, Secretary of the Britain-Vietnam
Friendship Society, sent his letter to Mrs Michelle Obama on
July 22, 2009 appealing to her to help right the terrible
wrong done to the children of Vietnam.
He wrote a letter as follows:
22 July 2009
Mrs Michelle Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington DC 20500
Dear Michelle Obama,
When in January this year your husband entered the White
House as President of the United States of America, the
hopes of millions around the world rose in anticipation at
the new beginning and for a change from the discredited
policies of the previous holder and his eight years.
You are a person in
your own right, and a mother of two young daughters. As a
mother you rightly love and care for your children and want
to protect them from any harm. It is a noble cause and one
that all mothers strive for despite many problems they may
face. Today I write to you with an appeal for your help.
In Vietnam there are mothers of children that are severely
handicapped through no fault of their own except for being
born in a country on which forty-eight years ago this coming
10th August, military forces of the United States began
spraying chemicals including Agent Orange that was
contaminated with Dioxin the worlds most poisonous
substance.
The spraying
continued for ten long years over areas of South Vietnam
resulting in massive destruction of many forests, the
animals and flora they contained. The crops and hamlets of
the people were also caught in the spraying, this did
further damage that has left a horrific legacy for the
people. Agent Orange had entered the food chain and in turn
the bodies of the people themselves.
Michelle, I wish
you could see, as I have seen during my visits to Vietnam,
the results that Agent Orange has had on the people, in
particular the children born many years after the spraying
stopped, and a war that ended in 1975. I know that as a
mother you would weep – as I have seen many Vietnamese
mothers weep - on seeing a young child with no arms, a child
minus a leg, or one leg shorter than the other, a young
teenager with a body twisted with spina bifida, a child with
no eyes. I could go on describing the horrific damage I,
and many others have seen done to many innocent children.
These innocents are
suffering from the results of a conflict in which was used
chemicals such as Agent Orange that has left nearly
four-million Vietnamese, the majority of whom need 24-hour
care and attention, and their families crying out for
justice.
When you look at, play
with, read or take your daughters out for a walk, I ask you
to imagine a Vietnamese mother wanting to do the same for
her children, but, due to their disabilities, is unable to
do so. I want you to imagine the consequences, as the child
grows into their teens, then into a young adult and still
needing the loving care of a mother.
One of the
questions raised with me by the mothers is “what will happen
to my children when I am no longer here?” Seeing the tragic
victims in hospitals, clinics, and orphanages and in their
homes, the question is not easy to answer, if there is an
answer. Agent Orange has already travelled into the third
generation, yet another question is being asked “how many
more generations?”
For many thousands
the questions no longer apply, they died in the wombs of
their mothers; they died in their early years of childhood.
Those that survive will have the care and love that mothers
give to their children, but care Michelle is not enough, the
near four-million need Justice from those that caused their
illness and disabilities and is the reason why I write to
you today.
Your husband, the
president, can call in the papers of the lawsuit brought by
the Vietnamese before the Courts in your country, he can
speak to the lawyers who presented the case seeking
justice. He will learn that the US Supreme Court rejected
the appeal without giving any reasons why. He will learn
that two of the Justices disgracefully declined to take part
and that another before he sat on the Supreme Court,
actually worked as a lawyer for Monsanto, one of the
companies that made Agent Orange. The president will surely
see that justice has been denied to the Vietnamese victims.
Michelle, look at
your two children as I appeal to you to help right the
terrible wrong done to the children of Vietnam.
Yours sincerely
Len Aldis. Secretary
Britain-Vietnam Friendship Society
Flat 2, 26 Tomlins Grove
London E3 4NX
Tel: 020 8980 7146
E-Mail: lenaldis@yahoo.co.uk |