Pubdate: Sun, 08 Oct 2000 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2000 Houston Chronicle Contact: Viewpoints Editor, P.O. Box 4260 Houston, Texas 77210-4260 Fax: (713) 220-3575 Website: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Author: John Otis GETTING TO ROOT OF DRUG PROBLEM Colombia Farmers May Pull Coca Crop LA ESPERANZA, Colombia -- Marco Julio Herrera, a 75-year-old grandfather, clasped the stem of a 3-foot-tall coca plant and tugged with all his might. The bush, thick with shiny green leaves that contain the raw material for cocaine, resisted for a moment, then popped out of the soil. "You have to pull it out, roots and all," Herrera explained. "Otherwise, it will just grow back." Despite a litany of crackdowns over the years, Colombia has never managed to keep its coca crop from growing back. Now, however, coca farmers like Herrera are offering to do the job themselves. Over the past two months, hundreds of coca growers in southern Putumayo state -- home to about 40 percent of Colombia's estimated 300,000-acre coca crop -- have agreed, in principle, to destroy their plants in exchange for government aid to help them join the legal economy. The initiative is being touted as a kinder, gentler alternative to raids by Colombian crop-dusters, which spray with herbicides. Aerial fumigation has long been a cornerstone of the war on drugs in Colombia, which produces up to 90 percent of the cocaine sold on U.S. streets. But the spraying program has sparked violent demonstrations by coca farmers, who contend that the crop-dusters have mistakenly destroyed food crops and have left their families destitute. What's more, they say, the eradication effort has lacked an effective follow-up program to help farmers switch to alternative crops. Some analysts, however, view voluntary eradication as a well-meaning but ill-fated sideshow in a state now on a front line of Colombia's 36-year civil war. The state is the main target of a U.S.-backed counteroffensive that will include massive aerial spraying and army attacks on Marxist guerrillas who are deeply involved in the drug trade. Because large areas of Putumayo are controlled by guerrillas or the right-wing paramilitaries who battle them, the Colombian government has been virtually unable to spray the state's drug crops in the past. Still, a handful of community activists has convinced the Colombian government that, at least in some areas of Putumayo, voluntary eradication may be a more effective way to wipe out coca and win over hardscrabble peasants. "Aerial spraying has been a huge failure. Colombia is the most fumigated country in the world, but the coca crop keeps getting bigger," said Manuel Alzate, mayor of the Putumayo town of Puerto Asis who is organizing the voluntary effort. "We want to prove that if the farmers eradicate coca by themselves, we can get rid of it forever." The voluntary program would provide assistance to peasants who grow less than 7.4 acres of coca, an amount that provides them with little more than a subsistence income. Families would have a one-year grace period to uproot their coca plants and receive government help in switching to legal jobs, such as cattle ranching, chicken raising, fish farming or growing food crops. Farmers would also receive temporary food aid, since it may take months or years to earn profits from their new ventures. In addition, the Colombian government has pledged to invest in roads as well as health and education programs in Putumayo. "People like the idea of leading a more dignified life," said Jorge Chamorro, a community leader and teacher in La Esperanza, a tiny hamlet where dozens of farmers have agreed to rip up their coca fields. For the next three months, the Colombian government has earmarked about $5 million for the eradication program, according to Gonzalo de Francisco, a special adviser to President Andres Pastrana for the Putumayo region. More funding could come from an $862 million U.S. aid package for Colombia that was approved last summer, de Francisco said. Most of the U.S. money is for training and hardware for the Colombian army and police, but about $81 million has been set aside for programs to wean farmers off coca crops. "The pace of implementation for these projects will depend heavily on the local farmers and their willingness to participate and comply with verifiable benchmarks," Rand Beers, the U.S. assistant secretary of state for international narcotics and law enforcement affairs, said in congressional testimony last month. At the same time, Colombian and U.S. authorities plan to step up police and army anti-drug operations in Putumayo. Aerial fumigation of industrial-sized coca plantations run by seasoned drug traffickers will start in December, Beers said. So far, coca growers in 45 communities near Puerto Asis have agreed to take part in the voluntary eradication program. But experts say they will face enormous difficulties. For one thing, many of the farms are located in war zones. This month, heavy fighting involving army troops, rebels and paramilitaries forced the government to postpone a ceremony in which it was to sign a letter of intent to formalize the manual eradication program. What's more, there appears to be deep distrust between many peasants in Putumayo and government officials. Col. Gabriel Diaz, commander of the army's 24th brigade in Putumayo, calls the manual eradication program a stalling tactic by coca farmers and guerrillas to keep out the crop-dusters. The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, known as FARC, the nation's largest guerrilla group,earns millions of dollars annually from the drug trade. "The FARC is just buying time," Diaz said in an interview. Others believe that if the program starts to work, the FARC will try to sabotage it. Some farmers accuse the government of ignoring past pacts with coca growers. They fear that once they rip out their plants, the government will cancel the aid programs, leaving them without a livelihood. "The day that they give me some money, I will gladly start pulling out my plants," said Alina Lopez, who has grown coca for the past 10 years and uses the money to buy school uniforms and textbooks for her children. "But I doubt that there is going to be any aid. Politicians always trick you." De Francisco claims that won't happen. "We are in this to make good on our promises," he said. __________________________________________________________________________ Distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake