Sunday, June 12, 2011

S. Korea: Agent Orange and More{?}

85 ex-US bases to be checked for environment pollution


06-10-2011 - The government has decided to conduct a ground check of 85 former U.S. military bases across the country from October to check whether soil and underground water there were contaminated with Agent Orange or other harmful chemicals.

The decision comes amid allegations that American soldiers buried hazardous materials inside the bases over the years.

The Ministry of National Defense said Friday that it will check all the bases that were returned to Korea between January 1990 and May 2003.

“We will secure a facility chart of all 85 former U.S. military camps by the end of this month and ask a professional organization to launch an environmental survey in October on behalf of the government,” Vice Defense Minister Lee Young-geol said.

Lee said the Korean government took the camps back without conducting any environmental studies on them, adding that one of them is Camp Mercer in Bucheon, Gyeonggi Province, which has been inspected by the provincial government for potential Agent Orange and other toxic chemical contamination.

The vice minister said that of 48 U.S. military bases, which have been returned since May 2003, 25 were found to have been contaminated with various pollutants.

“We launched a joint environmental assay into 25 bases with the U.S. military in accordance with the Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA). The investigation team did not find Agent Orange on any of the sites, and cleanup operations are in progress,” Lee said. {continued}

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