Tuesday, 6 September 2016

43 years down the line, US bombs still Destroying Vietnam

A U.S. secret operation in Laos that ended 43 years ago is still creating fresh wounds.  Eight-year-old Brong Yang has shrapnel in his side. In July, he made the mistake of playing with what he thought was a ball. Instead, it exploded.
“There was blood everywhere,” his father said. “I didn’t know what had happened, but when I felt metal under my son’s shirt, I knew it was a bomb.” That bomb was dropped more than four decades ago by the United States military. During the Vietnam War, the U.S. carpet-bombed neighboring Laos, in part to cut off North Vietnamese supply routes. That covert operation is called the Secret War.
Laos is the most heavily bombed country in the world per capita. On average, bombs were dropped here every eight minutes over nine years. Craters from the blasts still scar the landscape. But 80 million bombs did not explode during the war, and they remain a constant threat.
“These bombs are just waiting out there on the land to be found by some child,” Khamvongsa said. Explosions have hurt or killed an estimated 20,000 people in the years since the war.
Through her organization Legacies of War, Khamvongsa educates the American public and its politicians about the bombs. She has helped raise millions of dollars in American aid for relief efforts. In the chaos after the war, Khamvongsa’s family fled Laos, ultimately landing in the U.S. She was six then, and didn’t learn about bombing campaign until her 30s. She says the issue has been largely ignored.
“The American public needs to know what’s happening here. That this is what their country, now my country, has done and left behind,” she said. Khamvongsa said it was difficult when she learned that her homeland and her adopted home had such a dark history together.
“On the one hand, America was my new home. It received our family. It gave our family a new opportunity,” she said. “Yet there were parts of me that felt angry at how little people knew about what happened. And the fact that Laos was heavily bombed.” One of the leftover bombs exploded when Thoumy Silamhan was eight years old. He was digging for bamboo shoots to eat and lost his left hand in the blast.

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