The American soldier died of cancer a few weeks before his wedding. He was deployed in Afghanistan, or another victim of the US military’s toxic burning pit.

2020/11/2806:48:03 military 2842

[Global Network Military Report] According to a report on the US connectingvets website on November 25, 29-year-old US Navy soldier Patrick Duva originally planned to have a wedding on November 20, but on November 5 he suffered from cancer. He died after spreading. Since Dewar had been deployed in Afghanistan, his family suspected that the sudden appearance of cancer was directly related to the harmful substances released from the burning pit where the US military burned garbage.

The American soldier died of cancer a few weeks before his wedding. He was deployed in Afghanistan, or another victim of the US military’s toxic burning pit. - DayDayNews

The U.S. Army indiscriminately burned waste daily necessities

According to reports, Dewar’s brain pineal gland and pituitary gland had two tumors, and as the tumors spread on the spine, his nervous system was oppressed, which eventually caused He is blind. Dewar and his family insist that cancer is closely related to exposure to toxic substances while serving in Afghanistan. During his service in Afghanistan, the burning garbage pit was burning day and night, and he could breathe the poisonous gas in the air at all times.

reported that on November 20th, on the day of the planned wedding ceremony between the US soldier Dewar and his newlywed wife Chelsea Todd, Todd, like countless other brides, had hair, makeup and put on Beautiful wedding dress, but sitting on the grass in the cemetery all day.

The American soldier died of cancer a few weeks before his wedding. He was deployed in Afghanistan, or another victim of the US military’s toxic burning pit. - DayDayNews

Chelsea Todd (Chelsea Todd) went to the cemetery on the original wedding day

reported that Todd said that she now shoulders the mission of fighting for the rights and interests of American veterans, fighting for Dewar and all his comrades in the US military. . Todd emphasized that she wants people to be aware of the profound impact of exposure to toxic substances, not only hurting those veterans who have been exposed to toxic substances, but also hurting all those who love them.

It is reported that in March of this year, the US House of Representatives has introduced legislation hoping to vigorously improve the adverse effects of toxic chemicals in incineration pits on US soldiers. However, a plan for how to compensate American soldiers who have retired or died due to illness has not yet been drawn up. As for stopping this unreasonable garbage disposal method, it is nowhere in sight.

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