Pubdate: Fri, 18 Feb 2000 Source: Chicago Sun-Times (IL) Copyright: 2000 The Sun-Times Co. Contact: http://www.suntimes.com/index/ Author: Michael Hedges, Scripps Howard News Service COLOMBIA MAY TEST ANTI-COCA FUNGUS WASHINGTON--A fungus that destroys coca plants soon may be tested in Colombia. "Initially it would be a small test on the ground in Colombia, something on a far, far smaller scale than what would be needed for eradication," said Richard Baum, a foreign policy analyst for U.S. drug policy office. The fungus, a mycoherbicide, consumes coca plants whose leaves are the raw material used to produce cocaine, an expert at the U.S. Department of Agriculture said. While similar to a fungus that commonly kills tomato plants in American gardens, U.S. scientists said the fungus they have tested in Hawaii will attack no other plant. The fungus was discovered by researchers when coca leaf plants sent from Peru to U.S. research centers for study arrived dead. In the 1990s, a naturally occurring fungus devastated Peruvian coca crops for awhile. Testing in Colombia to make sure the fungus would not be harmful to people or animals and would not migrate to other crops could take a year or two, Baum said. Before the test can begin, an agreement must be signed between Colombia and the United Nations Drug Control Policy office. After months of discussions and research by both sides on technical and scientific concerns, the UN and Colombia could sign the agreement this month, said officials familiar with the negotiations. There has been limited use of chemical herbicides against drug crops in South America. But the fungus has proven a much more efficient predator of coca plants in U.S. forests. The plan to use the fungus was developed in the State Department, but concerns that Colombia would be sensitive to any appearance of U.S. pressure to adopt it led to a request for the UN to conduct negotiations, a State Department official said. The Clinton administration is urging Congress to approve a $1.6 billion aid package to Colombia. The aid is needed, in part, to help contend with a boom in coca leaf production there, the White House drug policy adviser, Barry McCaffrey, told Congress this week. While Peru and Bolivia have reduced their coca crops, coca production in Colombia has risen from 230 tons in 1995 to 520 tons last year, McCaffrey said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake