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Admiral Elmo Zumwalt, commander of
U.S. Navy in Vietnam and member of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, charged that the government's exoneration of Agent
Orange was politically motivated to cover up the true
effects of dioxin, and manipulate public perception.�
Admiral
Elmo R. ("Bud") Zumwalt, Jr,
USN (1920-2000)
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This is the forgotten story of the
shameful nexus between politics-industry-scientists to poison
the living and the future generations by terming the toxic
chemical as safe for humans and environment. There are an
estimated 650,000 like Hong Hanh in Vietnam, suffering from an
array of baffling chronic conditions. Another 500,000 have
already died. We are talking of the most toxic molecule known to
science -- Agent Orange -- sprayed during a prolonged military
campaign in the Vietnam war.
The company which manufactured and
marketed Agent Orange, has now moved into genetic engineering.
This is the company, which former US President Bill Clinton once
remarked: "...will lead us into 21st century."
Nearly 30 years after the Vietnam war,
the chemical weapon used by US troops is still exacting a
hideous toll on each new generation. Cathy Scott-Clark and
Adrian Levy report.
Specter Orange
CATHY SCOTT-CLARK &
ADRIAN LEVY / The Guardian 29mar03
Hong Hanh is falling to pieces. She has
been poisoned by the most toxic molecule known to science; it
was sprayed during a prolonged military campaign. The
contamination persists. No redress has been offered, no
compensation. The superpower that spread the toxin has done
nothing to combat the medical and environmental catastrophe that
is overwhelming her country. This is not northern Iraq, where
Saddam Hussein gassed 5,000 Kurds in 1988. Nor the trenches of
first world war France. Hong Hanh's story, and that of many more
like her, is quietly unfolding in Vietnam today. Her declining
half-life is spent unseen, in her home, an unremarkable concrete
box in Ho Chi Minh City, filled with photographs, family plaques
and yellow enamel stars, a place where the best is made of the
worst.
Hong Hanh is both surprising and
terrifying. Here is a 19-year-old who lives in a 10-year-old's
body. She clatters around with disjointed spidery strides which
leave her soaked in sweat. When she cannot stop crying, soothing
creams and iodine are rubbed into her back, which is a lunar
collage of septic blisters and scabs. "My daughter is
dying," her mother says. "My youngest daughter is 11
and she has the same symptoms. What should we do? Their fingers
and toes stick together before they drop off. Their hands wear
down to stumps. Every day they lose a little more skin. And this
is not leprosy. The doctors say it is connected to American
chemical weapons we were exposed to during the Vietnam
war."
There are an estimated 650,000 like
Hong Hanh in Vietnam, suffering from an array of baffling
chronic conditions. Another 500,000 have already died. The
thread that weaves through all their case histories is
defoliants deployed by the US military during the war. Some of
the victims are veterans who were doused in these chemicals
during the war, others are farmers who lived off land that was
sprayed. The second generation are the sons and daughters of war
veterans, or children born to parents who lived on contaminated
land. Now there is a third generation, the grandchildren of the
war and its victims.
This is a chain of events bitterly
denied by the US government. Millions of litres of defoliants
such as Agent Orange were dropped on Vietnam, but US government
scientists claimed that these chemicals were harmless to humans
and short-lived in the environment. US strategists argue that
Agent Orange was a prototype smart weapon, a benign tactical
herbicide that saved many hundreds of thousands of American
lives by denying the North Vietnamese army the jungle cover that
allowed it ruthlessly to strike and feint.
"[I]n Vietnam the US had
conducted the "largest chemical warfare campaign in
history."
Scientists
at a conference at Yale University in April 2002.
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New scientific research, however,
confirms what the Vietnamese have been claiming for years. It
also portrays the US government as one that has illicitly used
weapons of mass destruction, stymied all independent efforts to
assess the impact of their deployment, failed to acknowledge
cold, hard evidence of maiming and slaughter, and pursued a
policy of evasion and deception.
Teams of international scientists
working in Vietnam have now discovered that Agent Orange
contains one of the most virulent poisons known to man, a strain
of dioxin called TCCD which, 28 years after the fighting ended,
remains in the soil, continuing to destroy the lives of those
exposed to it. Evidence has also emerged that the US government
not only knew that Agent Orange was contaminated, but was fully
aware of the killing power of its contaminant dioxin, and yet
still continued to use the herbicide in Vietnam for 10 years of
the war and in concentrations that exceeded its own guidelines
by 25 times. As well as spraying the North Vietnamese, the US
doused its own troops stationed in the jungle, rather than lose
tactical advantage by having them withdraw.
On February 5, addressing the UN
Security Council, secretary of state Colin Powell, now famously,
clutched between his fingers a tiny phial representing
concentrated anthrax spores, enough to kill thousands, and only
a tiny fraction of the amount he said Saddam Hussein had at his
disposal. The Vietnamese government has its own symbolic phial
that it, too, flourishes, in scientific conferences that get
little publicity. It contains 80g of TCCD, just enough of the
super-toxin contained in Agent Orange to fill a child-size
talcum powder container. If dropped into the water supply of a
city the size of New York, it would kill the entire population.
Ground-breaking research by Dr Arthur H Westing, former director
of the UN Environment Programme, a leading authority on Agent
Orange, reveals that the US sprayed 170kg of it over Vietnam.
John F Kennedy's presidential victory
in 1961 was propelled by an image of the New Frontier. He called
on Americans to "bear the burden of a long twilight
struggle ... against the common enemies of man: tyranny,
poverty, disease, and war itself." But one of the most
problematic new frontiers, that dividing North and South
Vietnam, flared up immediately after he had taken office,
forcing him to bolster the US-backed regime in Saigon. Kennedy
examined "tricks and gadgets" that might give the
South an edge in the jungle, and in November 1961 sanctioned the
use of defoliants in a covert operation code-named Ranch Hand,
every mission flown signed off by the president himself and
managed in Saigon by the secret Committee 202 - the call sign
for defoliating forests being "20" and for spraying
fields "2".
Ngo Luc, 67, was serving with a North
Vietnamese guerrilla unit in the Central Highlands when he saw
planes circling overhead. "We expected bombs, but a fine
yellow mist descended, covering absolutely everything," he
says. "We were soaked in it, but it didn't worry us, as it
smelled good. We continued to crawl through the jungle. The next
day the leaves wilted and within a week the jungle was bald. We
felt just fine at the time." Today, the former captain is
the sole survivor from his unit and lives with his two
granddaughters, both born partially paralysed, near the central
Vietnamese city of Hue.
When US troops became directly
embroiled in Vietnam in 1964, the Pentagon signed contracts
worth $57m (�36m) with eight US chemical companies to
produce defoliants, including Agent Orange, named after the
coloured band painted around the barrels in which it was
shipped. The US would target the Ho Chi Minh trail - Viet Cong
supply lines made invisible by the jungle canopy along the
border with Laos - as well as the heavily wooded Demilitarised
Zone (DMZ) that separated the North from the South, and also the
Mekong Delta, a maze of overgrown swamps and inlets that was a
haven for communist insurgents.
A reporter for the St Louis Dispatch
witnessed a secret spraying mission and wrote that the US was
dropping "poison". Congressman Robert Kastenmeier
demanded that the president abandon "chemical warfare"
because it tainted America's reputation. Instead, William Bundy,
a presidential adviser, flatly denied that the herbicide used by
America was a chemical weapon, and blamed communist
propagandists for a distortion of the facts about the Ranch Hand
operation. Only when the Federation of American Scientists
warned that year that Vietnam was being used as a laboratory
experiment did the rumours become irrefutable. More than 5,000
American scientists, including 17 Nobel laureates and 129
members of the Academy of Sciences, signed a petition against
"chemical and biological weapons used in Vietnam".
Eight years after the military launched
Operation Ranch Hand, scientists from the National Institute of
Health warned that laboratory mice exposed to Agent Orange were
giving birth to stillborn or deformed litters, a conclusion
reinforced by research conducted by the US department of
agriculture. These findings coincided with newspaper reports in
Hanoi that blamed Agent Orange for a range of crippling
conditions among troops and their families. Dr Le Ke Son, a
young conscript in Hanoi during the war and now director of
Vietnam's Agent Orange Victims Fund, recalls, "The
government proposed that a line of runners carry blood and
tissue samples from the front to Hanoi. But it was more than 500
miles and took two months, by which time the samples were
spoiled. How could we make the research work?
There was no way to prove what we could
see with our own eyes." In December 1969, President Nixon
made a radical and controversial pledge that America would never
use chemical weapons in a first strike. He made no mention of
Vietnam or Agent Orange, and the US government continued
dispatching supplies of herbicides to the South Vietnamese
regime until 1974.
That year, Kiem was born in a one-room
hut in Kim Doi, a village just outside Hue. For her mother,
Nguyen, she should have been a consolation because her husband,
a Viet Cong soldier, had been killed several months earlier.
"The last time he came home, he told me about the spray,
how his unit had been doused in a sweet-smelling mist and all
the leaves had fallen from the trees," Nguyen says. It soon
became obvious that Kiem was severely mentally and physically
disabled. "She can eat, she can smile, she sits on the bed.
That's it. I have barely left my home since my daughter was
born."
By the time the war finally ended in
1975, more than 10% of Vietnam had been intensively sprayed with
72 million litres of chemicals, of which 66% was Agent Orange,
laced with its super-strain of toxic TCCD. But even these
figures, contained in recently declassified US military records,
vastly underestimate the true scale of the spraying. In
confidential statements made to US scientists, former Ranch Hand
pilots allege that, in addition to the recorded missions, there
were 26,000 aborted operations during which 260,000 gallons of
herbicide were dumped. US military regulations required all
spray planes or helicopters to return to base empty and one
pilot, formerly stationed at Bien Hoa air base between 1968 and
1969, claims that he regularly jettisoned his chemical load into
the Long Binh reservoir.
"These herbicides should never
have been used in the way that they were used," says the
pilot, who has asked not to be identified. Almost immediately
after the war finished, US veterans began reporting chronic
conditions, skin disorders, asthma, cancers, gastrointestinal
diseases. Their babies were born limbless or with Down's
syndrome and spina bifida. But it would be three years before
the US department of veterans' affairs reluctantly agreed to
back a medical investigation, examining 300,000 former
servicemen - only a fraction of those who had complained of
being sick - with the government warning all participants that
it was indemnified from lawsuits brought by them. When rumours
began circulating that President Reagan had told scientists not
to make "any link" between Agent Orange and the
deteriorating health of veterans, the victims lost patience with
their government and sued the defoliant manufacturers in an
action that was finally settled out of court in 1984 for $180m
(�115m).
It would take the intervention of the
former commander of the US Navy in Vietnam, Admiral Elmo
Zumwalt, for the government finally to admit that it had been
aware of the potential dangers of the chemicals used in Vietnam
from the start of Ranch Hand. The admiral's involvement stemmed
from a deathbed pledge to his son, a patrol boat captain who
contracted two forms of cancer that he believed had been caused
by his exposure to Agent Orange.
Every day during the war, Captain Elmo
Zumwalt Jr had swum in a river from which he had also eaten
fish, in an area that was regularly sprayed with the herbicide.
Two years after his son's death in 1988, Zumwalt used his
leverage within the military establishment to compile a
classified report, which he presented to the secretary of the
department of veterans' affairs and which contained data linking
Agent Orange to 28 life-threatening conditions, including bone
cancer, skin cancer, brain cancer - in fact, almost every cancer
known to man - in addition to chronic skin disorders, birth
defects, gastrointestinal diseases and neurological defects.
Zumwalt also uncovered irrefutable
evidence that the US military had dispensed "Agent Orange
in concentrations six to 25 times the suggested rate" and
that "4.2m US soldiers could have made transient or
significant contact with the herbicides because of Operation
Ranch Hand". This speculative figure is twice the official
estimate of US veterans who may have been contaminated with
TCCD.
Most damning and politically sensitive
of all is a letter, obtained by Zumwalt, from Dr James Clary, a
military scientist who designed the spray tanks for Ranch Hand.
Writing in 1988 to a member of Congress investigating Agent
Orange, Clary admitted: "When we initiated the herbicide
programme in the 1960s, we were aware of the potential for
damage due to dioxin contamination in the herbicide. We were
even aware that the military formulation had a higher dioxin
concentration than the civilian version, due to the lower cost
and speed of manufacture. However, because the material was to
be used on the enemy, none of us were overly concerned."
The Office of Genetic Counselling and
Disabled Children (OGCDC) operates out of a room little bigger
than a broom cupboard. Dr Viet Nhan and his 21 volunteers share
their cramped quarters at Hue Medical College with cerebral
spinal fluid shunt kits donated from Norfolk, Virginia;
children's clothes given by the Rotary Club of Osaka, Japan;
second-hand computers scavenged from banks in Singapore.
Vietnam's chaotic and underfunded
national health service cannot cope with the demands made upon
it. The Vietnamese Red Cross has registered an estimated one
million people disabled by Agent Orange, but has sufficient
funds to help only one fifth of them, paying out an average of
$5 (�3) a month. Dr Nhan established the free OGCDC,
having studied the impact of Agent Orange as a student, to match
Vietnamese families to foreign private financial donors.
"It was only when I went out to the villages looking for
case studies that I realised how many families were affected and
how few could afford help," he says. "I abandoned my
research. Children need to run before they die."
The walls of his room are plastered
with bewildering photographs of those he has helped: operations
for hernias and cleft palates, open-heart surgery and kidney
transplants. All of the patients come from isolated districts in
central Vietnam, villages whose names will be unfamiliar, unlike
the locations that surround them: Khe Sanh, Hamburger Hill, Camp
Carroll and the Rock Pile. "I am not interested in
apportioning blame," Nhan says. "I don't want to talk
to you about science or politics. What I care about is that I
have 60 sick children needing financial backers. They cannot
wait for the US to change its policy, take its head out of the
sand and clear up the mess."
He takes us into an intensive care ward
to meet nine-year-old Nguyen Van Tan, who two weeks before had
open-heart surgery to correct a birth defect thought to be
connected to dioxin poisoning. There is no hard proof of this,
but his father, who sits beside the bed, talks of being sprayed
with defoliants when he fought with the Viet Cong. The area they
live in was repeatedly doused during the war. Almost all of his
former battlefield comrades have disabled children, he says.
Nhan ushers us away. "I don't want to tell the family yet,
but their boy will never fully recover. He is already suffering
from total paralysis. The most we can do now is send them home
with a little money."
Back in his tiny office, the doctor
gestures to photocopies of US Air Force maps, sent by a
veterans' organisation because the US government refuses to
supply them. These dizzying charts depict the number of
herbicide missions carried out over Quang Tri, a province
adjacent to the DMZ, from where almost all Nhan's patients come.
Its topography is obliterated by spray lines, 741,143 gallons of
chemicals dropped here, more than 600,000 of them being Agent
Orange. "I'm just scratching the surface," he says.
The Vietnamese government is reluctant
to let us travel to Quang Tri province. It does not want us
"to poke and prod" already dismal villagers, treating
them as if they are medical exhibits. We attempt to recruit some
high-powered support and arrange a meeting in Hanoi with Madame
Nguyen Thi Binh, who until last year was the vice-president of
Vietnam. She receives us at the presidential palace in a
teak-panelled hall beneath an enormous photograph of Ho Chi Minh
in a gold frame writhing with dragons. "Thank you, my young
friends, for your interest in Vietnam," Madame Binh says,
straightening her grey silk ao dai, a traditional flowing
trouser suit.
She looks genteel, but old photographs
of her in olive fatigues suggest she is a seasoned campaigner.
As minister of foreign affairs for the Provisional Revolutionary
South Vietnamese government, she negotiated at the Paris peace
talks in 1973. "I must warn you, I will not answer
questions about George W Bush," she says, casting a steely
gaze, perhaps conscious of the fact that, since the lifting of
the US economic embargo in 1994, trade with America has grown to
�650m a year.
Madame Binh does, however, want to talk
about chemical warfare, recalling how, when she returned after
the war to her home province of Quang Nam, a lush region
south-west of Hue which was drenched in defoliants, she found
"no sign of life, just rubble and grass". She says:
"All of our returning veterans had a burning desire for
children to repopulate our devastated country. When the first
child was born with a birth defect, they tried again and again.
So many families now have four or five disabled children,
raising them without any hope."
What should the US do? Madame Binh
laughs. "It's very late to do anything. We put this issue
directly on the table with the US. So far they have not dealt
with the problem. If our relationship is ever to be normal, the
US has to accept responsibility. Go and see the situation for
yourself." She sends us back to Hue. Over chilled water and
tangerines, we talk to a suspicious party secretary who asks us
why we have bothered to come after all these years. "There
is no point," he says. "Nothing will come of it."
But he opens his file all the same and
reads aloud: "In Hue city there are 6,633 households
affected by Agent Orange and in them 3,708 sick children under
the age of 16." He eventually agrees to take us north-west,
over the Perfume river, beyond the ancient royal tombs that
circle this former imperial city, towards the DMZ. We arrive at
a distant commune where a handyman is sprucing up a bust of Ho
Chi Minh with white gloss paint.
Eventually, the chairman of the
People's Committee of Dang Ha joins us, and our political
charabanc stuffed with seven officials sets out across the green
and gold countryside, along crisscrossing lanes. The chairman
tells us proudly how he was born on January 31 1968, the night
of the Tet offensive, the turning point of the war, when the
Viet Cong launched its assault on US positions. By the time we
stop, we are all the best of friends and, holding hands, he
pulls us into the home of the Pham family, where a wall of
neighbours and an assembly of local dignitaries dressed in
shiny, double-breasted jackets stare grimly at a moaning child.
He lies on a mat on the floor, his
matchstick limbs folded uselessly before him, his parents taking
it in turns to mop his mouth, as if without them he would drown
in his own saliva. Hoi, the boy's mother, tells us how she met
her husband when they were assigned to the same Viet Cong unit
in which they fought together for 10 years. But she alone was
ordered to the battle of Troung Hon mountain. "I saw this
powder falling from the sky," she says. "I felt sick,
had a headache. I was sent to a field hospital. I was close to
the gates of hell. By the time I was discharged, I had lost the
strength in my legs and they have never fully recovered. Then Ky
was born, our son, with yellow skin.
Every year his problems get
worse." Her husband, Hung, interrupts: "Sometimes, we
have been so desperate for money that we have begged in the
local market. I do not think you can imagine the humiliation of
that." And this family is not alone. All the adults here,
cycling past us or strolling along the dykes, are suffering from
skin lesions and goitres that cling to necks like sagging
balloons. The women spontaneously abort or give birth to
genderless squabs that horrify even the most experienced
midwives.
In a yard, Nguyen, a neighbour's child,
stares into space. He has a hydrocephalic head as large as a
melon. Two houses down, Tan has distended eyes that bubble from
his face. By the river, Ngoc is sleeping, so wan he resembles a
pressed flower. "They told me the boy is depressed,"
his exhausted father tells us. "Of course he's depressed.
He lives with disease and death."
This is not a specially constructed
ghetto used to wage a propaganda war against imperialism. The
Socialist Republic of Vietnam has long embraced the free market.
This is an ordinary hamlet where, in these new liberal times,
villagers like to argue about the English Premiership football
results over a glass of home-brewed rice beer. Here live three
generations affected by Agent Orange: veterans who were sprayed
during the war and their successors who inherited the
contamination or who still farm on land that was sprayed.
Vietnam's impoverished scientific community is now trying to
determine if there will be a fourth generation. "How long
will this go on?" asks Dr Tran Manh Hung, the ministry of
health's leading researcher.
Dr Hung is now working with a team of
Canadian environmental scientists, Hatfield Consultants, and
they have made an alarming discovery. In the Aluoi Valley,
adjacent to the Ho Chi Minh trail, once home to three US Special
Forces bases, a region where Agent Orange was both stored and
sprayed, the scientists' analysis has shown that, rather than
naturally disperse, the dioxin has remained in the ground in
concentrations 100 times above the safety levels for
agricultural land in Canada.
It has spread into Aluoi's ponds,
rivers and irrigation supplies, from where it has passed into
the food chain, through fish and freshwater shellfish, chicken
and ducks that store TCCD in fatty tissue. Samples of human
blood and breast milk reveal that villagers have ingested the
invisible toxin and that pregnant women pass it through the
placenta to the foetus and then through their breast milk,
doubly infecting newborn babies. Is it, then, a coincidence that
in this minuscule region of Vietnam, more than 15,000 children
and adults have already been registered as suffering from the
usual array of chronic conditions?
"We theorise that the Aluoi Valley
is a microcosm of the country, where numerous reservoirs of TCCD
still exist in the soil of former US military
installations," says Dr Wayne Dwernychuk, vice-president of
Hatfield Consultants. There may be as many as 50 of these
"hot spots", including one at the former US military
base of Bien Hoa, where, according to declassified defence
department documents, US forces spilled 7,500 gallons of Agent
Orange on March 1 1970. Dr Arnold Schecter, a leading expert in
dioxin contamination in the US, sampled the soil there and found
it to contain TCCD levels that were 180 million times above the
safe level set by the US environmental protection agency.
It is extremely difficult to
decontaminate humans or the soil. A World Health Organisation
briefing paper warns: "Once TCCD has entered the body it is
there to stay due to its uncanny ability to dissolve in fats and
to its rock solid chemical stability." At Aluoi, the
researchers recommended the immediate evacuation of the worst
affected villages, but to be certain of containing this hot
spot, the WHO also recommends searing the land with temperatures
of more than 1,000C, or encasing it in concrete before treating
it chemically.
At home, the US takes heed. When a dump
at the Robins Air Force Base in Georgia was found to have stored
Agent Orange, it was placed on a National Priority List,
immediately capped in five feet of clay and sand, and has since
been the subject of seven investigations. Dioxin is now also a
major domestic concern, scientists having discovered that it is
a by-product of many ordinary industrial processes, including
smelting, the bleaching of paper pulp and solid waste
incineration. The US environmental protection agency, pressed
into a 12-year inquiry, recently concluded that it is a
"class-1 human carcinogen".
The evidence is categoric. Last April,
a conference at Yale University attended by the world's leading
environmental scientists, who reviewed the latest research,
concluded that in Vietnam the US had conducted the "largest
chemical warfare campaign in history". And yet no money is
forthcoming, no aid in kind. For the US, there has only ever
been one contemporary incident of note involving weapons of mass
destruction - Colin Powell told the UN Security Council in
February that, "in the history of chemical warfare, no
country has had more battlefield experience with chemical
weapons since world war one than Saddam Hussein's Iraq".
The US government has yet to respond to
the Hatfield Consultants' report, which finally explains why the
Vietnamese are still dying so many years after the war is over,
but, last March, it did make its first contribution to the
debate in Vietnam. It signed an agreement with a reluctant
Vietnamese government for an $850,000 (�543,000)
programme to "fill identified data gaps" in the study
of Agent Orange. The conference in Hanoi that announced the
decision, according to Vietnamese Red Cross representatives who
attended, ate up a large slice of this funding. One of the
signatories is the same US environmental protection agency that
has already concluded that dioxin causes cancer.
"Studies can be proposed until
hell freezes over," says Dr Dwernychuk of Hatfield
Consultants, "but they are not going to assist the
Vietnamese in a humanitarian sense one iota. We state
emphatically that no additional research on human health is
required to facilitate intervention or to protect the local
citizens."
There is cash to be lavished in Vietnam
when the US government sees it as politically expedient. Over
the past 10 years, more than $350m (�223m) has been spent
on chasing ghosts. In 1992, the US launched the Joint Task
Force-Full Accounting to locate 2,267 servicemen thought to be
missing in action in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. Jerry O'Hara,
spokesman for JTF-FA, which is still searching for the remains
of 1,889 of them, told us, "We don't place a monetary value
on what we do and we'll be here until we have brought all of the
boys back home."
So it is that America continues to
spend considerably more on the dead than it does on the millions
of living and long-suffering - be they back home or in Vietnam.
The science of chemical warfare fills a silent, white-tiled room
at Tu Du hospital in Ho Chi Minh City. Here, shelves are
overburdened with research materials. Behind the locked door is
an iridescent wall of the mutated and misshapen, hundreds of
bell jars and vacuum-sealed bottles in which human foetuses
float in formaldehyde. Some appear to be sleeping, fingers
curling their hair, thumbs pressing at their lips, while others
with multiple heads and mangled limbs are listless and slumped.
Thankfully, none of these dioxin babies ever woke up.
One floor below, it is never quiet.
Here are those who have survived the misery of their births,
ravaged infants whom no one has the ability to understand,
babies so traumatised by their own disabilities, luckless
children so enraged and depressed at their miserable fate, that
they are tied to their beds just to keep them safe from ha
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