
ANZ ESG formal Notice
- agentorangechild
- Jul 26
- 2 min read
Subject: Formal Legal Notice – ICC Submission, ESG Liability, and Financial Exposure to Chemical Warfare Crimes
Dear ANZ Legal and Media Teams,
I am writing to formally place ANZ on notice in relation to ongoing legal escalation now under review by the International Criminal Court (ICC) concerning chemical warfare crimes, systemic regulatory failure, and financial complicity in inherited harm caused by TCDD (Agent Orange) exposure.
As of 1 July 2025, a formal submission has been lodged with the ICC under Article 15 of the Rome Statute. This submission includes detailed annexes documenting:
Ongoing human rights violations across multiple generations;
Government and corporate concealment of dioxin-related harm;
Transnational failures in fiduciary duty, ESG compliance, and public accountability.
Major banks with known or historical financial links to government defence contracts, multinational manufacturers, and public trust management are now under scrutiny for possible indirect complicity, ongoing profit exposure, and suppression of redress.
This notice is part of a broader sequence of formal actions targeting financial, legal, and regulatory actors implicated in continued obstruction of international law and justice.
I recommend ANZ’s legal and ESG departments immediately review your exposure in light of:
Australia’s ratified but unimplemented international treaty obligations;
The human impact of chemical warfare and its financial concealment;
Emerging ICC and OECD action related to second-generation harm.
All correspondence, public responses, and failures to respond will be recorded as part of ongoing annex updates. This includes escalation through ESG channels, investor disclosures, and international transparency forums.
Warm Agent Orange Burns regards,
Danielle
We will always be a child of a Vietnam Veteran
A formal complaint has been lodged with the International Criminal Court for Crimes against Humanity. The final submission was the 1st of July 2025.
Australia ratified International treaties but failed to implement them into domestic laws.

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