Pubdate: Fri, 03 Aug 2001 Source: The News-Gazette (IL) Copyright: 2001 The News-Gazette Contact: http://www.news-gazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1272 Author: Jodi Heckel EXPERT SAYS DRUG TRADE FEEDS COLOMBIA VIOLENCE URBANA - Before Colombia can end the violence that plagues the country, it must end its drug trade, and that means ending the demand for illegal drugs in the United States, says a former Colombian government official who's at the University of Illinois this week. "That's what supports the guerrillas and the paramilitary forces," said Alfonso Lopez Caballero, who until recently was a member of the Colombian government's 2-year-old peace commission negotiating with the guerrillas in the country. "As long as there is no solution for the drug problem, in one way or another we're going to have to contend with unbearable amounts of violence." Lopez Caballero has served as interior minister and ambassador for Colombia and held other government posts. He is at the UI for the 12th biennial conference of the Association of Colombianists, at which academics, artists and government officials will discuss issues of cultural significance to Colombia, including politics, the arts and literature. Colombia has been engaged in a 37-year-old civil war with rebel groups. Lopez Caballero said the United States has become one of the main players in that war. "It's where the drugs are sold and where the money comes from that feeds all these violent groups," he said. "It has allowed them to grow so fast over the last 10 years. On the other hand, the U.S. is helping the government to suppress these groups with advice and funds. Colombia is a theater for a war in which America is one of the main players on both sides, directly and indirectly. In the meantime, Colombia is coming to pieces." Lopez Caballero said guerrillas make money by being paid by drug dealers to organize peasants and to provide protection from the government for drug labs and airstrips. "They are classic communist guerrillas from another age, from the 1950s," Lopez Caballero said. "You would have thought they would be left without support for their existence after the fall of communism, but drugs have amply compensated. But they are not gangsters. They are basically armed politicians with a radical view of the world - pure Marxists/Leninists. They even call each other 'comrade.'" Lopez Caballero said the war, while fought mostly in isolated rural areas, has reduced the authority of the government and undermined the judicial system. He said the nation's stability is important to more than just Colombians. "This is not a national or local issue," he said. "It is really a problem that concerns the whole international community. It is partly because of the international community that we have the problem. The problem is not only civil war, but the devastation of the rain forest and the human rights violations that are a part of life there." Lopez Caballero said spraying drug crops has driven growers farther into the rain forest and they're destroying the forest by burning it to clear areas to grow coca. Rivers are being polluted by the chemicals sprayed on the plants, he said, and about 3 million people, or 10 percent of Colombia's population, have been displaced because of the violence. "It was a dynamic, vibrant country going forward with a very well- managed economy," Lopez Caballero said "The people are very hardworking. But the fact is, unless some of the fundamentals of the situation change, there is no dynamic impulse toward peace." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake