Pubdate: Thu, 05 Oct 2000 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2000 The Miami Herald Contact: One Herald Plaza, Miami FL 33132-1693 Fax: (305) 376-8950 Website: http://www.herald.com/ Forum: http://krwebx.infi.net/webxmulti/cgi-bin/WebX?mherald Author: Andres Oppenheimer COLOMBIAN GUERRILLAS, DRUG TRAFFICKERS POSE A THREAT BEYOND COUNTRY'S BORDERS Amid fears of a growing spillover of Colombia's armed conflict into Panama, Ecuador, Venezuela and Peru, the bishop of a Panamanian jungle province on the border with Colombia says the problem is already much worse than governments are willing to admit. Monsignor Romulo Emiliani, the Roman Catholic bishop of Panama's border state of Darien, told me in a telephone interview this week that Colombian guerrillas, arms dealers and drug traffickers have turned his sparsely populated region into a safe haven where Panamanian security forces don't dare to enter. Emiliani left Panama a few weeks ago, following death threats presumed to have come from the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) or their allies in the drug business. He is now in a U.S. city, which he asked me not to identify. ``Governments always seek to portray the image that everything is under control, because they fear that saying otherwise would scare off foreign investors,'' the bishop said. ``But the fact is, the situation is serious.'' FARC rebels and right-wing paramilitary forces are moving freely in an area stretching from the border to nearly 50 miles inside Panama, an area that is almost inaccessible by land because there are no roads. Until recently, Emiliani visited the area by canoe, on horseback or walking. ``They come and go, buying food, weapons, everything they need,'' the bishop said. ``They pay with drugs, and the drugs stay in Central America.'' In addition to ``infecting'' Darien with drugs and the corruption stemming from drug and arms trafficking, the presence of FARC rebels is prompting hit-and-run attacks by Colombia's paramilitary groups into Panamanian territory. The violence is resulting in growing numbers of Colombian refugees moving into Panama. In recent months, about 600 Colombians have sought refuge on the Panamanian side of the border, and there are reports that about 2,000 are about to move in coming weeks, Emiliani said. Emiliani wants the United Nations High Commission for Refugees to help deal with the refugees, but says the Panamanian government has failed to make an official request so far. Like most Panamanians, the bishop says he doesn't want U.S. military involvement in Panama. What he wants is international help to arm and train Panama's police, so that the Panamanian government can reassert its control over Darien. While President Mireya Moscoso of Panama is more willing to admit the problem than her predecessor was, the government still refuses to request international support, the bishop says. In addition, he wants Panama to devote more resources to Darien, a long-forgotten area, to keep drug and arms trafficking from becoming its people's main source of income. Is he exaggerating the situation? Nobody seems to dispute that the FARC rebels have been coming and going in Darien for the past 30 years. And Emiliani's statements are not taken lightly by U.S. and European diplomats. The good news is that a recent Gallup poll in Panama revealed that 62 percent of the Panamanian people consider Darien to be the country's biggest security problem. Perhaps the government -- and authorities in neighboring countries -- will soon see it the same way and get involved in a regional peace effort to solve Colombia's war. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D