~ Le Viêt Nam, aujourd'hui. ~
The Vietnam News

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Land mines plague Vietnam 30 years after war

TRIEU THUONG - Nearly three decades after the Vietnam War ended, land mines kill and maim farmers and other Vietnamese almost weekly, and de-mining efforts are focusing on the wrong areas, according to the first comprehensive postwar study, released Wednesday.

The study, funded by the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund, is the first look at the ongoing casualties after the war. No national studies on land mines and unexploded ordnance have ever been done. The study, conducted over a three-week period in August 2002, takes an in-depth look at one district in central Quang Tri province, the site of the former demilitarized zone.

Especially hard-hit was Trieu Phong, a rural, rice-farming community where many villagers are missing one or more limbs. Some 1,270 people have been killed or injured in the district since 1975. Nearly half the victims were aged 16 to 30, and 80 percent were men, the study found. Researchers found 46 percent of the accidents in Trieu Phong occurred among farmers working the fields -- an indication de-mining efforts, mainly targeting former U.S. bases, are not concentrated where they would have the greatest impact.

''The real problem up to now that's been causing death and injuries has not been the old military bases, but it's debris and ordnance in the communities and around the house and in the fields,'' said Chuck Searcy, country representative for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund, which funded the study through a partnership with Quang Tri provincial officials. The study also found that 8 percent of all incidents involved scavengers searching for ordnance to sell for scrap metal.

Phan Xuan Quang, 32, said he's lost many friends that way, but he must accept the risk. As a farmer, he makes only $64 a year. ''We don't have enough land to grow rice or trees,'' said Quang, who earns $6.50 to $13 for each bomb he digs up. ''I know it is dangerous. [But] there's nothing I can do to earn extra money to support my family.''

Farmers Le Tat Ha, 59, and his son, Toan, 31, from Trieu Thuong village, are examples of the impact of the leftover explosives. Ha accidentally hit a bomb with a hoe while farming in June 1975. The explosion left shrapnel embedded in his chest, arms and legs. ''I still feel pain now, especially when the weather changes,'' he said. His son set off another explosion more than a decade later while tilling the fields as a teenager. The fingers on his left hand were blown off.

The Vietnamese military conducted sweeps of the area for a decade after the war ended, but efforts only focused on removing ordnance found above ground.

By Margie Mason - The Associated Press - November 26, 2003.