http://www.drugsense.org/dpfwi/ Pubdate: Mon, 28 Aug 2000 Source: San Francisco Examiner (CA) Copyright: 2000 San Francisco Examiner Contact: Website: http://www.examiner.com/ Forum: http://examiner.com/cgi-bin/WebX Author: Jeremy McDermott, Examiner Staff CLINTON VISIT TO TOUT DRUG WAR FUNDING FOR COLOMBIA Will Make Quick Stop Wednesday To Talk Up $1.3 Billion Effort PUTUMAYO PROVINCE, Colombia - On Wednesday, President Clinton will spend six hours in Colombia to tout the $1.3 billion that the United States is spending here this year to turn the tide in the war against drugs, a war being fought on American streets as well as the jungles of Colombia. The aid, mainly military in nature, is going to three Colombian army anti-narcotics battalions - about 3,000 men, U.S.-trained and - equipped, along with 60 helicopters designed to give them mobility in a country of mountains and jungles. This force is intended to take the war on drugs to where the drugs are grown, in the southern province of Putumayo. Putumayo is home to 150,000 acres of coca, the raw material for cocaine. The U.S.-inspired plan is to use the anti-narcotics battalions to destroy drug labs and to protect the largest aerial fumigation program in the world. This will serve not only to stop the flow of drugs from the country, but to attack the revenues of Colombia's left-wing guerrillas and right- wing paramilitaries, which both finance their activities largely through income from the drug trade. With these forces weakened, the reasoning goes, the state can regain control of the half of the country they dominate and bring peace to Colombia, which has known civil conflict for 36 years. The plan sounds great - but there are a few catches. For starters, Putumayo is a densely jungled region of some 300 square miles. There is almost no infrastructure, and the main means of transport are along the rivers that lace the area. It is also home to the most feared fighting units of the largest rebel group, the Southern Block of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). Of FARC's estimated 17,000 fighters, more than 3,000 are in Putumayo, perfect terrain for guerrilla warfare. The guerrillas have already made it clear they relish the chance to take on the U.S.-trained anti- narcotics battalions and have prepared several "surprises" for them. Furthermore, much of Colombia's coca is grown by subsistence farmers, who grow coca alongside pineapple, maize and plantain, as a cash crop. They already live well below the poverty line, mostly in shacks without electricity and running water. These people will be the victims of the fumigation program to eradicate coca plants, and there is already evidence of what harm aerial spraying will do to them. One of the aerial fumigation programs in Putumayo was conducted in Puerto Guzman. Estaban Torres, a teacher in the community, described what happened. "In this area, there is no water supply, and the people drink water from the streams which pass alongside the fields. So when the planes flew over, spraying these toxic chemicals, people drank this water or prepared their food with this water and fell sick, some very sick," he said. Puerto Guzman is not an isolated example, according to the staff at San Francisco Hospital in Puerto Asis, one of the biggest towns in Putumayo. "Well, cases of poisoning come in often, due to the chemicals from fumigation, but also there are cases of skin rashes, eye conjunctivitis and breathing problems due to contact with these toxic chemicals. The worst hit are the children," said Marta Cecilia Guapacha, head nurse at the hospital. Then there is the question of human rights. Human rights groups have long alleged that the Colombian military maintains ties to the right-wing paramilitaries. Scores of officers, right up to general rank, have been charged with complicity in paramilitary massacres. In order to get approval for his $1.3 billion request, President Clinton had to use his presidential waiver, as Colombia failed to fulfill the basic human rights requirements stipulated for U.S. aid. "Not a single one of the five human rights provisions contained in the legislation has been satisfied," said Jose Miguel Vivanco of Human Rights Watch. "A waiver that ignores Colombia's dismal human rights situation would send a clear message to the Colombian government and its security forces that the U.S. commitment to human rights does not go beyond rhetoric." While Colombia welcomes the U.S. aid - indeed, President Andres Pastrana's beleaguered government desperately needs it - neighboring countries range from lukewarm to fearful of the consequences. Brazil has expressed worries about the environmental effects of the fumigation chemicals on the region's delicate ecosystem. Peru has just uncovered an arms smuggling ring, which supplied the FARC with 10,000 rifles, in its territory. Venezuela has already seen many of its citizens kidnapped for ransom by Colombian guerrillas. Ecuador, which borders on Putumayo, fears there may be an exodus of up to 40,000 poor Colombian peasants who will have their crops destroyed by the aerial fumigation program. Panama has already had border settlements destroyed by warring Colombian factions. Not all the Colombian authorities are convinced the U.S.-inspired "Plan Colombia" will work. German Martinez, a government-appointed official in Putumayo, says that the plan reveals a flawed understanding of the drug trade, which he sees as divided into growers, dealers and consumers. "The people of North America are not distinguishing between the different links in the chain of narco-trafficking. The Colombian state should regain autonomy in policy for dealing with coca cultivation, because this plan is not the vision of Bogota, but responds only to the drug and counterinsurgency interests of the United States," Martinez said. There also is evidence that the fumigation program may help rather than hurt the guerrillas and paramilitaries. Torres, the teacher from Puerto Guzman, could hardly contain his tears while describing the effect of the fumigation on his community: "I actually had two ex-students of mine, girls, who left the school to join the guerrillas. After the crops are destroyed, legal and illegal, with no alternatives, no employment, the young people went to the guerrillas." - --- MAP posted-by: John Chase