Pubdate: Mon, 16 Jul 2001 Source: Worcester Telegram & Gazette (MA) Copyright: 2001 Worcester Telegram & Gazette Contact: http://www.telegram.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/509 Author: Bronislaus B. Kush, Telegram & Gazette Staff Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/area/Colombia (Reports about Colombia) A WITNESS AGAINST WAR ON DRUGS The first slide showed a once-thriving banana tree -- its wilting branches bending toward the peasant farmer's home, just a few feet away. The second showed a toddler with ugly lesions running along his legs. Kathy Knight had hoped the powerful images would jolt those attending her presentation on America's war on drugs in Colombia. Apparently, they did. Many shook their heads in disbelief at the unintended effects of an aerial bombing of herbicides on coca fields. "The United States' current war against drugs is just not winnable," said Ms. Knight, addressing the Worcester Pleasant Street Friends Meeting yesterday. "A lot of innocent people are getting hurt." Colombia -- a South American country about the size of California and Texas combined -- has been home to cartels that have processed countless tons of coca leaves into cocaine for shipment to the United States. In response, Congress has appropriated billions of dollars to eradicate the crops. Last summer, lawmakers approved a $1.3 billion package to Colombia -- about 80 percent of which was funneled to the military. Authorities used most of the money to buy helicopter gunships, to train counter-narcotics "battalions" and to fund spraying of drug crops. The package made Colombia the number three recipient of U.S. military aid, after Israel and Egypt. This year, President Bush wants another $1.1 billion to fund similar drug fighting strategies in other nearby countries. Many believe, however, that the plan to cut the drug flow from the area is flawed. "In many ways, it's like putting gasoline on hot coals," said Ms. Knight, a Newton resident who visited Colombia recently with the watchdog group Witness for Peace. "Colombia is a complicated country, very much like a puzzle. There are many things that U.S. officials have to consider, if they seriously want to stop the cocaine trade." Ms. Knight said American policy-makers have to study Colombia's rocky political system, its history, and its nearly flat-lined economy. Colombia has a population of 39.3 million. Its legal exports -- about $11.4 billion worth a year -- are derived mainly from coffee, coal, bananas and flowers. Since the mid-19th century, two political parties have battled for control. The nation has been ravaged by civil war for four decades. The two parties managed to keep dictators out, but were not politically inclusive of other groups. "Social justice issues were never addressed, so, by the mid-20th century, the pot was really boiling," Ms. Knight told the local Quakers group. The political uncertainty bred poverty and displacement, as more and more peasants lost their land to large commercial and agricultural interests. Today, it's estimated that 2 million Colombians have no homes. About 56 percent live in poverty, with individuals subsisting on $500 or less annually. The government is relatively ineffective, controlling mainly metropolitan areas, and regions are inaccessible because roadways have deteriorated. Besides their political and economic woes, Colombians are caught in the struggle between the 120,000-member army, which has one of the worst human rights records in the world, and the guerrillas. Besides the army and the rebels, Colombians must contend with paramilitary units, hired by landowners and others with vested commercial interests. From time to time, the paramilitary has been used or aided by the formal military establishment. Since 1991, 1,500 unionists have been murdered and hundreds of journalists, academics, clergymen and human rights advocates have been targeted. With all the instability, the drug cartels established their presence, making millions cultivating the shrub-like coca plant, the dried leaves of which contain cocaine. Coca was so profitable that several indigenous Colombians began growing it to make money for food or medicine. "It was their only means of getting cash," Ms. Knight said. "The drug traffickers would stop by three times a year to collect a few sacks (of leaves)." It's believed that up to 18,000 small farmers grow coca. Ms. Knight and other delegates from Witness for Peace, which has been taking Americans to conflict spots since 1983, met with peasants, social rights activists, economists, military and government officials, as well as U.S. embassy staff. "With the exception of Colombian and American officials, we received a very clear message," Ms. Knight said. "People from all over told us that this war was not about drugs, but about power and money. There's no question that this strategy greatly increases America's foothold in Latin and South America." Ms. Knight said the American government would be better off spending money on drug treatment programs. "As long as there's demand, you're going to have drugs," she said. Ms. Knight added that global debt relief and fair trade programs would cut into the drug trade by stabilizing the government and economy. She said the crop eradication program has also failed, even though 74,000 acres are routinely sprayed. Ms. Knight urged individuals to lobby Congress about changing America's drug fighting policy. "We can fight the drug problem while helping the Colombian people," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: GD