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Buried dioxin could leak from containers and enter surrounding groundwater, possibly contaminating drinking water. Environmental tests have confirmed extremely high levels of dioxin in people, fish and soil near a former U.S. air base where American troops stored the herbicide during the Vietnam War. Lt. Col. Jeffrey Buczkowski, an Eighth Army spokesman, said Agent Orange is generally destroyed by high-temperature incineration at sea or on a remote Pacific island. Residents near Camp Carroll, many of them elderly, worry about groundwater safety and cancer, Gong Hyun-chul, a local official near the base, said in an interview. The reports have soured land prices and agricultural sales, Gong said, and activists plan protest rallies near the camp. Any scandal over contamination could influence other areas in Asia that host American troops. There are 47,000 U.S. troops in neighboring Japan, and Washington is trying to orchestrate a delicate relocation of one of its bases on the island of Okinawa, where anger against U.S. troops is high. Although the Agent Orange investigation is still in its early stages, the U.S. military has released a statement saying a 1992 study found "that a large number of drums containing chemicals, pesticides, herbicides and solvents were buried" in 1978 near the area mentioned by House and others. The study didn't specifically identify Agent Orange. The military removed the material and 40-60 tons of soil from the area in 1979-80, the statement said, dumping it somewhere "offsite." Officials are investigating why the material was buried in the first place and what happened to it after it was dug up, the statement said. More testing at the area in 2004 revealed trace amounts of dioxin, the statement said, but "the amount was deemed to be no hazard to human health." House, however, blames his work at Camp Carroll for Type 2 diabetes and nerve damage
-- both of which have been linked to Agent Orange -- and other serious health problems that make him too sick to work. "I'm falling apart," House said. "I got microwaved on the inside from what's in the ground" in South Korea.
[Associated
Press;
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