Pubdate: Sat, 24 Jun 2000 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Copyright: 2000 The Dallas Morning News Contact: P.O. Box 655237, Dallas, Texas 75265 Fax: (972) 263-0456 Feedback: http://dmnweb.dallasnews.com/letters/ Website: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Forum: http://forums.dallasnews.com:81/webx Author: Jimmy Langman, Special Contributor to The Dallas Morning News BOLIVIA STRUGGLING WITH PRICE OF FIGHTING COCA Economies dependent on illegal crop have few alternatives CHIMORE, Bolivia - Coca leaf farmers recently dynamited sections of the mountain road connecting the Bolivian capital, La Paz, with the northern Yungas region, causing a landslide of rocks and boulders - a natural road blockade. A U.S. military helicopter was shot at last month, injuring one soldier. Violent acts of protest such as these are on the rise in Bolivia's coca-growing regions as the country moves very close to eradicating all of its illegal coca as part of the global "war on drugs." At the root of much of these protests is the lack of economic alternatives for coca farmers and rising human-rights abuses, the growers' representatives say. "While we have eradication of coca without real alternative development, there will be more unemployment, more growing of coca, more violence," said Evo Morales, a leader of the coca growers and a Bolivian congressman. The term "alternative development" refers to infrastructure and agro-industrial projects that have taken place in Bolivian coca-growing regions in order to move their economies away from a dependence on coca, the raw material for making cocaine. Since the Bolivian government began its "Dignity Plan" to eradicate coca in 1998, it has succeeded in reducing coca, experts say. But it has made only limited progress in advancing alternative development. Bolivia was once the world's leading producer of coca for processing into cocaine. According to government figures, nearly 87 percent of Bolivia's exports at the end of the 1980s was coca. Today, Bolivia has fallen to third among the world's producers of coca for cocaine: Colombia now supplies 70 percent of the world's cocaine, and Peru is the second-leading producer. Last year, Bolivia reduced by an astounding 68 percent its coca-growing capacity in the Chapare region, its main coca-growing area, located near the city of Cochabamba. The government says it should eliminate all remaining coca in the Chapare, about 12,050 acres, by the end of this year. An estimated 5,000 acres of coca are scheduled for elimination next year in the Yungas region, along with 750 acres in the northwestern Apolo region. By 2002, the government will allow just 30,000 acres of coca crops to remain in the Yungas for legal uses such as tea and chewing. The government allows some coca to be legally grown because it has long been a part of Bolivian culture. Locals say that a tea called mate de coca is a cure for numerous ailments, from stomach viruses to altitude sickness to the common cold. Other Bolivians chew coca for the mild energy boost it gives them. But while the eradication of illegal coca has been successful, Bolivian government statistics show that 94.6 percent of the estimated 185,000 people in the Chapare are now living in desperate poverty. Thousands of Quechua and Aymara Indian farmers are out of work due to coca eradication. Miguel Zambrana, owner of Chapare Export, which exports bananas to Argentina, employs more than 200 people on his plantations in the Chapare. Nine years ago his business received seed funding from the U.S. Agency for International Development; it is considered one of the alternative development success stories. But Mr. Zambrana says that despite the enormous potential of the Chapare as a profitable agricultural zone for exporting pineapple, papaya, and other fruits, few other examples of successful alternative development exist. "None of the money currently for alternative development - which is not that much - goes to the people living in the Chapare. It is going to high salaried consultants," Mr. Zambrana said. "We need a development bank set up to help the people." U.S. officials say that existing alternative development efforts are working. "It has taken many years of research and investment by Bolivian and international donors to develop successful alternative crops for the Chapare. But for farmers and investors willing to make the effort, great opportunities exist," said the U.S. ambassador, Donna Hrinak, in a prepared statement. Edmundo Espinoza, a director of Bolivia's Vice Ministry on Alternative Development, said that funds are used for technical assistance to farmers and for building infrastructure. "There is still poverty all over the Chapare," Mr. Espinoza said. "But at least some people there now have electricity, running water, schools and roads." Human-rights groups also say that Bolivia's government - whose elected president, Hugo Banzer, ruled the country as a right-wing dictator from 1971 to 1978 - is relying on strong-arm tactics to eradicate the coca. They say that in Bolivia's rush to meet U.S. certification - required by U.S. law in order to receive foreign aid and multilateral bank loans - its military has led a brutal crackdown in the Chapare, leading to thousands of arrests and numerous human-rights violations. "The Chapare has been militarized. Homes are illegally searched; people are being illegally detained and tortured," said Veronica Ramos, a spokesperson for the Cochabamba group Permanent Assembly for Human Rights. The U.S. State Department Human Rights Report for Bolivia in 1999 noted that "there were credible reports of abuses by police, including use of excessive force, petty theft, extortion and improper arrests. Investigations of alleged official abuses were slow." Bolivian officials assert that coca eradication must be accompanied by greater support from the United States and Europe for economic alternatives to coca. "We need the U.S. and Europe to help us more with the alternative development programs. We have some, but we need more because the coca eradication is progressing rapidly," said Vice President Jorge Quiroga. Nearly all of the $67 million in U.S. financing for Bolivia's coca-eradication program last year went toward removing coca, fighting drug traffickers and funding the Bolivian military. Last year, the United States also approved special funding for three new military bases in the Chapare. Mr. Quiroga estimates that Bolivia needs about $60 million more per year for successful alternative development. Meanwhile, until alternatives prosper, Evo Morales insists there will be more, not less, coca growing. "Coca has a big illegal international market," Mr. Morales said. "And when you eradicate the coca, the price of coca goes up." Jimmy Langman is a free-lance journalist based in Santiago, Chile. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck