Pubdate: Tue, 29 Aug 2000
Source: Saint Paul Pioneer Press (MN)
Copyright: 2000 St. Paul Pioneer Press
Contact:  345 Cedar St., St. Paul, MN 55101
Website: http://www.pioneerplanet.com/
Forum: http://www.pioneerplanet.com/watercooler/
Author: Andres Oppenheimer

Note: Oppenheimer is a Latin America correspondent for the Miami
Herald, 1 Herald Plaza, Miami FL 33132. Distributed by KRT News 
Service.

COLOMBIA VISIT MUST TOUCH ON HUMAN RIGHTS

President Clinton's one-day visit to Colombia may be just a photo
opportunity to help the Democratic Party look tough on drugs in the
November U.S. elections, but the trip also has the potential to produce
a dangerous backlash in Latin America.

By visiting Colombia only days after releasing $1.3 billion in
military aid to help President Andres Pastrana of Colombia fight drug
traffickers and their Marxist guerrilla allies, Clinton will draw
international attention to what critics are prematurely calling a ``new
Vietnam.''

The trip on Wednesday to the coastal city of Cartagena has unleashed a
barrage of criticism from U.S., Colombian and other Latin American
human-rights groups.

They say the U.S. military aid package will worsen human-rights abuses 
by the Colombian military and the paramilitary groups they often 
protect. That, in turn, will trigger an even more violent reaction from 
the more than 15,000 Marxist rebels of the Revolutionary Armed Forces 
of Colombia, they say.  

In addition, Colombia's neighbors such as Ecuador, Peru and Brazil fear 
the U.S.-backed military offensive will push drug traffickers and 
guerrillas to cross into their territories. And President Hugo Chavez 
of Venezuela, a former army officer, fears U.S. aid will turn the 
Colombian army into a formidable force that could become a threat to 
Venezuela, with which Colombia has an unresolved border dispute.  

The White House seems to be confident that U.S. television images of a 
triumphant Clinton embracing Pastrana as a hero in the war on drugs 
will far overshadow the three-second sound bites that human-rights 
activists may get to voice their concerns.  

Clinton is expected to highlight the nonmilitary portion of the U.S. 
aid package, about $240 million that will go to fund human-rights 
monitors, judicial reform and economic development projects. And he 
will reassure the world that, under U.S. law, no more than 500 U.S. 
military trainers and 300 contract employees will be allowed to be in 
Colombia at any time, and that they will be barred from going into 
combat.  

Will the world believe him? I'm not so sure. While there is a consensus 
that Colombia's war is a humanitarian catastrophe -- it already has 
produced up to 1.8 million internal refugees over the past decade, 
according to human-rights groups, more than Kosovo and East Timor 
together -- many countries fear an escalation of the conflict.  

If Clinton is looking beyond U.S. domestic politics and wants to help 
end the Colombian war, he should stress two key points during this 
trip:  

First, he should state that as a condition for releasing the future 
disbursements of the U.S. aid package, Colombia will have to take very 
concrete human-rights steps laid out by the U.S. Congress. Among them, 
suspending military commanders known to have committed human-rights 
violations and prosecuting leaders of paramilitary groups.  

Second, he should make a call to encourage other Latin American nations 
to take a more active diplomatic role in the Colombian conflict.  

Unless Clinton uses his visit to Colombia to speak bluntly about human 
rights and regional cooperation, his presence there will only draw new 
attention to the crisis, and make Colombia's neighbors more nervous.  
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