Pubdate: Sun, 03 Jun 2001 Source: Morning Call (PA) Copyright: 2001 The Morning Call Inc. Contact: http://www.mcall.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/275 Author: Joanna Poncavage U.S. DRUG POLICIES BACKFIRING IN COLOMBIA, ACTIVIST SAYS Last summer, the United States pledged $1.3 billion in aid to the South American country of Colombia to combat its narcotics industry and also to promote peace, revive its economy and strengthen its democracy. On paper, "Plan Colombia" has admirable goals. In reality, it perpetuates a violent war that began long before the country started exporting drugs, says a Colombian economist who came here to tell his story to churches and peace groups in the mid-Atlantic region. "As long as the U.S. continues to give aid to Colombia, the terrible situation will continue," says Hector Mondragon, 46. "It is only the innocent people who are the victims of this policy." Mondragon spoke recently to a group of about 50 clergy, professors and friends gathered at the City View Diner in Whitehall Township for a breakfast meeting sponsored by the Lehigh Pocono Committee of Concern, one of the oldest peace groups in the United States. Mondragon, who works as an economic adviser to Colombia's National Peasant Council, says his life and family have been threatened because he speaks out for the poor and disenfranchised. "Part of my work is to visit rural communities and give workshops about economics and constitutional law," he said, speaking with the help of an interpreter from Witness for Peace, a group that describes itself as a politically independent group committed to nonviolence. Based in Washington, D.C., the group seeks to educate Americans about the impact of U.S. economic and military policy in Latin America. Mondragon says Colombia is a country devastated by poverty, political violence and social upheaval. The programs made possible by U.S. money do little to improve things. Instead, he says the money indirectly allows the country's warring factions to buy more weapons and escalate the violence. Last year alone, there were 425 massacres, or more than one per day, carried out by paramilitary groups against civilians, he reported. He described the paramilitary groups as private armies supported by wealthy landowners and industrialists conducting a social genocide of campesinos (peasants) and ethnic Colombians. Union leaders also are targets of the military and paramilitary. Mondragon said he was tortured by the Colombian army because he was a member of a community committee that supported a strike by oil workers. The torture temporarily paralyzed his hands and arms. "The officer in charge was a graduate of the School of the Americas," he said. SOA, now known as the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation, is a training facility for Latin American soldiers at Fort Benning, a U.S. Army base in Georgia. Several Lepoco members in his audience said they have gone there to demonstrate against it. The paramilitary groups also battle groups known as guerillas, which are fighting against the Colombian upper class and the oil industry. Last October, a paramilitary force mutilated and decapitated 75 people with chain saws in a province that had elected its first indigenous governor. "They've always killed the political opposition in Colombia," says Mondragon. Five thousand people who lived in the area abandoned their land and fled in terror. Aerial spraying of coca cultivation with herbicide doesn't work, said Mondragon, because when one area is sprayed, the small farmers expand into the forest and cut down more trees to plant their coca. Fumigation is just one more method of taking campesinos' land and making them move farther into the forest, Mondragon added. In 1998, he said, 16 thousand hectares (1 hectare equals 2.47 acres) of coca were fumigated, to be replaced with 38 thousand hectares. In 2000, 30 thousand fumigated hectares were replaced with 89 thousand hectares. About 500,000 campesinos are cultivating coca, which is used to produce cocaine, or poppies, which supply the raw material for heroin, said Mondragon. Recently, 2 million campesinos, or peasant farmers, were displaced from their homes. The oil companies also are backing Plan Colombia, because land that is fumigated is opened up to oil exploration when indigenous people abandon it, says Mondragon. Mondragon was introduced by Lauren Cliggitt, a recent Lehigh University graduate who traveled to Colombia with a Witness for Peace delegation of 100 people. She spent time in a squatter's community in the southern region of the country. "We saw how they have to live," she says, "people have been displaced by violence and fumigation." Once a rich agricultural country, Colombia now imports food. Thanks to the breakup of the cartel that helped small farmers get a fair price for their coffee, the country that once was synonymous with coffee now imports it from Peru. "Our agriculture is in ruins," says Mondragon. The poor farmers have no other opportunity than to grow coca or opium poppies, he adds. "The free trade system has caused this abundance of illegal drugs." If we really want to get rid of the drug trade, he said, we must follow the lead of France and the plan proposed by its president, Jacques Chirac. Americans should seek out programs that promote fair trade and ethical consumer choices, and that work directly with farmers and artisans, Mondragon said. Examples are Equal Exchange, Level Ground and Ten Thousand Villages. Working with groups such as these, campesinos can get a fair price for their products. "Exchange free trade for fair trade," Mondragon said. In addition to causing homelessness, aerial sprayings cause human health problems. The herbicide can cause skin rashes, especially on children, he said. Spraying has also killed cattle, he said, and contaminated water. Spraying also destroys food crops growing close to the coca fields, as well as nearby natural flora and forests. The herbicide's active ingredient is glyphosate, the same Monsanto chemical found in the world's most widely used agricultural herbicide, Roundup. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency classifies glyphosate as non-carcinogenic, but according to Extonet, a pesticide information project of several cooperative extensions and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, it can cause significant eye irritation. Mondragon says that the herbicide formula used for spraying in Colombia also contains ingredients that cause it to adhere to surfaces to increase its effects. According to the U.S. State Department, aerial spraying has escalated since December, when helicopters and herbicide paid for with U.S. aid sprayed almost half of the coca fields in southern Colombia or about 25 thousand hectares. In addition, more than 106 coca processing sites have been destroyed, says Wes Carrington,spokesperson for the State Department's Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs. Although the State Department stops short at declaring the drug way in Colombia a success, "these measures have encouraged over 3,500 families to sign up for alternative development assistance," he says. Carrington admits that coca cultivation has been increasing in Colombia because similar eradication efforts forced it out of Peru and Bolivia. "We consider those countries a success," he says. Carrington says the state department hasn't seen any evidence to substantiate the claims that the spraying is harmful to human health. According to the State Department, the violence level in Colombia is very high and it involves illegal armed groups, including paramilitary groups on the right, and groups originally founded as leftist guerilla groups on the left. Over the years, some groups, which battle each other, have gotten involved in drug trafficking and mass kidnappings as ways to supplement their income. Carrington admits that Colombia is a very difficult issue to get a handle on. "It is very complex. The violence and conflict have been going on for so long, the narcotics aspect is an overlay." Carrington also admits that the State Department was aware of human rights abuses involving the Colombian army and paramilitary groups. "That is an area Congress is very careful to put controls on," he says. "Only those people who were uninvolved with human rights abuses could be involved in units the U.S. was going to help train." John Peeler, head of the political science department at Bucknell University in Lewisburg, Union County, has been studying Colombia since the 1970s. He also agrees that the situation in Colombia is convoluted. The U.S. monetary aid is not helping the Colombian people, says Peeler. "The problems in Colombia are far too complicated to be helped by such a program like this that focuses on stopping the production of coca, the transportation of coca and production of cocaine. You can stop it at any given location but you will push it into some other location. You won't stop it finally, until you stop the demand." Cocaine penetrates all aspects of Colombian life, says Peeler. The Colombian government puts cocaine control at a lower priority than the United States, but because the U.S. will ante up money to fight drugs, the Colombians will propose to fight drugs. "It is a way for the Colombians to get some money and some arms, ostensibly for fighting drugs, but they may be fighting guerillas," he says. In Colombia, says Peeler, "Nothing is what it seems." - --- MAP posted-by: Andrew