Paris court rejects Vietnamese woman’s appeal against Agent Orange makers

By Mari Eccles | 08/23/2024 12:25 PM EDT

Tran To Nga says she has had tuberculosis, cancer and Type 2 diabetes after being exposed to the herbicide in 1966.

Tran To Nga gives an interview to AFP in Hanoi.

Tran To Nga was exposed to Agent Orange in 1966. Nhac Nguyen/AFP via Getty Images

A Paris court has rejected an appeal by a French-Vietnamese woman who has been trying to sue Bayer-Monsanto and 13 other agrochemicals groups that supplied Agent Orange to the U.S. Army during the Vietnam War.

Some 18 million gallons of the highly toxic herbicide were sprayed in Vietnam during the war. The country blames the chemical for birth defects in 150,000 children.

Tran To Nga, who was born in what was then known as French Indochina, was exposed to the sticky defoliant substance in 1966 when it was used to destroy forests protecting communist fighters.

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She has had “repeated tuberculosis, cancer and type II diabetes,” according to advocacy group Collectif Vietnam-Dioxine. Her daughter, born in 1969, died of a heart defect at 17 months, while her two other daughters and grandchildren have “serious pathologies,” the group said.

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