Pubdate: Sun, 07 Jan 2001
Source: Washington Post (DC)
Copyright: 2001 The Washington Post Company
Contact:  1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071
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Author: Scott Wilson, Washington Post Foreign Service

SPRAYING PROGRAM HURTS COLOMBIA'S SMALL FARMERS

Colombia's mammoth anti-drug campaign, backed by more than $1 billion of 
U.S. military and social development aid, has entered a new punitive phase 
of aerial spraying that is killing fields of coca as well as the legal 
crops of farmers here in the country's most bountiful drug-growing region.

Using U.S. and European satellite photographs to pick targets, Colombian 
army and police aircraft have begun spraying herbicides on small farms in 
western Putumayo, the southern province that accounts for more than half 
the country's coca production.

The flights, paid for by the U.S.-backed anti-drug campaign called Plan 
Colombia, have occurred almost daily over several farming communities since 
Dec. 22 and have wilted hundreds of acres of coca, the key ingredient in 
cocaine, and legal crops, which often are planted alongside coca. Local 
people say the chemicals have sometimes fallen on towns and farmhouses, 
causing people to suffer fevers. They also blame the spraying for the 
deaths of some cows and fish.

"Those without coca are more affected than those with it," said Hilberto 
Soto Vargas, a local farmer whose banana grove was fumigated even though, 
by his account, he pulled up his coca plants two years ago when he became a 
member of a Pentecostal church. "All of this is dying now," he said, 
pointing to his fields. "All of it."

Colombia accounts for 80 percent to 90 percent of the world's cocaine 
production and a growing share of its heroin. The fumigation in Putumayo 
marks a bold new escalation of Plan Colombia, a U.S.-backed $7.5 billion 
campaign to cut Colombian drug production by half in six years, by 2005.

Until recently, spraying focused almost entirely on remote industrial-sized 
coca and poppy plantations that grow most of Colombia's drugs. Officials 
claim it has denuded roughly 125,000 acres of drug fields. Now the planes 
are targeting more populous farming areas like this one, where coca is seen 
by many poor villagers as a legitimate cash crop and is often grown side by 
side with corn, yucca, pineapple and livestock. Often it shares a plot next 
to the farmer's tin-roofed shack.

The new approach is designed in part to punish several coca-rich 
communities that have refused to join a U.S.-backed program that pays 
farmers to uproot illegal crops and replace them with legal ones. Some of 
the communities declined to join because of threats from leftist guerrillas 
who profit from the drug trade.

In La Hormiga, a town 30 miles west of Putumayo's commercial center of 
Puerto Asis, town officials and residents say the fumigation has been 
devastating. In interviews, dozens of farmers said that the spray, 
delivered by small planes escorted by armed helicopters, has killed 
hundreds of acres of food crops, scores of cattle and hundreds of fish that 
washed up on the banks of the Guamuez River. On several occasions, several 
witnesses said, the aircraft dropped herbicide within the town itself.

U.S. drug control policy director Barry R. McCaffrey has said repeatedly 
that the herbicide, Roundup, produced by Monsanto Co., is harmless to 
humans and animals -- he called it "totally safe" during a November visit 
to Colombia.

However, in the United States it is sold with warning labels advising users 
to "not apply this product in a way that will contact workers or other 
persons, either directly or through drift." The U.S. Environmental 
Protection Agency says glyphosate-based products such as Roundup should be 
handled with caution and could cause vomiting, swelling of the lungs, 
pneumonia, mental confusion and tissue damage.

Several farmers here said they have experienced fever-like symptoms since 
being sprayed, but local doctors report only one hospitalization for 
chemical poisoning. Mayor Flover Edmundo Meza, whose own farm was fumigated 
last week, predicts widespread hunger throughout the municipality of 35,000 
people because of crop damage. The loss could result in thousands of 
families leaving their farms, he said.

"Our intention is to eliminate these crops -- voluntarily -- and avoid 
these damages, but the government is not listening to us," said Meza, who 
took office Jan. 1. "People will not be able to eat, and we don't have the 
resources to address this. We are asking the government to stop at once."

The U.S. Congress has pledged $1.3 billion over the next two years to Plan 
Colombia, most going toward such military hardware as the helicopters used 
in the fumigation missions. The U.S. contribution also includes money to 
build small businesses, health clinics, schools and roads that Colombian 
officials hope will help end two decades of coca cultivation in Putumayo.

European nations have chipped in more than $200 million for social 
programs, but have roundly condemned the fumigation strategy. However, that 
approach is backed with enthusiasm by the United States; some U.S. 
officials in Colombia proudly display photos of denuded coca and poppy 
fields on their office walls.

About $81 million of the U.S. aid is available for the plan's alternative 
development program, which through subsidies and small loans seeks to coax 
farmers to abandon coca crops for legal ones. Of that sum, $30 million is 
marked for eradication programs that farmers must join if they are to avoid 
fumigation.

In December, more than 500 families signed up for crop substitution 
programs in Puerto Asis, an area largely protected from guerrilla forces by 
privately funded paramilitary groups and a nearby army base.

But not a single farmer in La Hormiga or in the neighboring municipality of 
San Miguel signed on to the plan when it was presented here late last 
summer. Gonzalo de Francisco, President Andres Pastrana's point man for 
Plan Colombia, said the communities understood the consequences but might 
have been frightened off by pressure from guerrilla forces.

De Francisco said the towns, which sent his office petitions pleading for 
an end to the fumigation six days after it began, will be offered another 
chance to sign the pacts in coming weeks. In the meantime, the spraying 
will continue.

"Obviously, we take these reports of harm from spraying seriously and we 
are trying to get the best information we can so we can analyze the 
situation correctly," de Francisco said. Fumigation is not perfect, he 
said, and everyone would be better off if the villagers agreed to join the 
programs to end coca cultivation.

The central government in Bogota argues that the spraying is necessary 
because as much as one-third of Colombia's coca comes from small farms like 
the ones here. An estimated 66,000 acres of coca are under cultivation in 
the municipality of Valle de Guamuez, of which La Hormiga is the capital. 
That is almost double the acreage of food crops and accounts for a large 
fraction of the province's total coca production, which has been increasing.

But a recent tour of the area suggested there is no way to fumigate from 
the air without harming legal agriculture as well as drug crops.

"That is the thing that hurt me," said Rosa Elvira Zambrano, a 71-year-old 
widow, pointing to her neighbor's four-acre coca field, which lies across a 
barbed-wire fence from her withering grove of banana trees and yucca. 
Zambrano, who has lived on a seven-acre farm inside La Hormiga's city 
limits for 25 years, grows food and raises chickens to support her 
daughter, also a widow, and three grandchildren.

On the morning of Dec. 22, she said, a group of planes and helicopters 
passed over her farm three times, spraying herbicide on her crops while 
mostly missing her neighbor's coca. "It's the government that has ruined 
all this," she said. "How will I eat?"

More than a dozen farmers said the aircraft appear to be spraying from high 
altitudes, perhaps for fear of guerrilla ground fire. The result, they say, 
has been indiscriminate fumigation. A reporter's inspection of fields in 
the area suggested that food crops have been hit at least as hard as coca.

Ismael Acosta, a 46-year-old father of five, cultivates an acre and a half 
of coca on his farm along the banks of the Guamuez River. He said that at 
noon last Wednesday, more than 10 aircraft passed over his farm, most of 
which is planted with corn and yucca, a common crop grown for its roots. 
One day later, his corn patch had turned brown and his yucca was losing 
leaves. A few yards away, his coca patch showed signs of yellowing.

In Puerto Asis, meanwhile, about 550 farmers are beginning a social 
experiment meant to end fear of fumigation. Last month, two-thirds of them 
signed agreements with the government to receive $1,000 payments if they 
pulled up their coca plants within a year. The other third, who don't grow 
coca, received pledges of the same subsidy as a reward for staying out of 
the drug business.

The farmers can keep the money or use it to buy farming supplies to get a 
new start with legal crops. The sum would be enough to pay for two milk 
cows, 50 chickens, an acre of banana trees and more.

More important, the agreements authorize the farmers to apply to a local 
nonprofit foundation for small-business loans from a pool of U.S. and 
European aid. Farmers are to get seats on the foundation's board and the 
chance to pitch ideas for putting such enterprises as cattle ranches and 
fish farms on former coca fields.

Fernando Bautista is a butcher who helps run his cousin's 15-acre coca farm 
along the placid Putumayo River near Santa Ana. Bautista has lost three 
brothers to drug-trade murders; now he says he wants to give his two 
daughters another way of life by starting a dairy farm with government help.

He and his cousin, Ramiro Garcia, have joined with 20 other coca farmers to 
pitch the idea. They plan to pool their $1,000 government payments, then 
seek a loan to purchase 10 cows each, build stables and buy tank trucks.

But the economics must make sense for Garcia to give up the $6,000 in 
annual profit he has been getting from the 35 pounds of coca paste that his 
farm produces each year.

Along the edge of his field stands a warning: a small patch of brilliant 
green plants resembling clover -- infant coca bushes, enough to plant 25 acres.

"If the government helps us, I will sell them or just pull them up," Garcia 
said. "If not, I'll plant them."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom