Pubdate: Mon, 26 Nov 2001 Source: MSNBC (US Web) Copyright: 2001 MSNBC Contact: http://msnbc.com/news/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/938 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) PEASANTS SLOW TO DESTROY PLAN COLOMBIA DRUG CROPS BOGOTA, Colombia, Nov. 26 -- Just a few of the 35,000 peasant families from Colombia's cocaine heartland who promised to destroy drug crops in return for "Plan Colombia" aid have done so, a senior government official said. But Gonzalo de Francisco, in charge of distributing aid under the multi-billion-dollar Plan Colombia in the steamy jungles of Putumayo in the country's lawless south, hopes that suspicious farmers will soon realize promised money is on its way and keep their side of the bargain. Plan Colombia is a carrot-and-stick strategy promising poor farmers money to switch to other crops and threatening them with U.S.-backed military spray operations if they do not. But, a year into the plan in the key Putumayo region, only the stick part of the equation has so far made progress in reducing drug crops, de Francisco said. "I am convinced that there have to be results in the next three months," de Francisco told a small number of foreign reporters. "Results in which the social (aid) element begins to hit the number of sown hectares." Under the voluntary eradication pacts, farmers should have torn up their coca by mid-2002 at the earliest. The struggle to reduce Colombia's drug crop is made more complicated by the country's 37-year-old war, and illegal armed groups have a strong presence in Putumayo. Both the guerrillas of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, and right-wing paramilitaries have admitted to taking drug money. Although reliable data, based on time-consuming interpretation of satellite photographs, is still not available, de Francisco estimates that Putumayo currently has 125,000-138,000 acres (50,000-55,000 hectares) currently sown with coca leaf -- the raw material of cocaine. It is a little under half of total production in Colombia, which is the world's largest cocaine producer. PUTUMAYO PEOPLE STILL DON'T TRUST GOVERNMENT This is down from about 165,000 acres (66,000 hectares) before a massive spraying campaign began last December, but almost none of the reduction has been due to peasants pulling up their own crops. "The main problem we have in the Putumayo is that, despite all we have done, we still haven't been able to get the community to fully trust us," said de Francisco. In some cases, drug traffickers have prevented peasants from giving up coca, and have funded new plantations, he said. About $50 million has been assigned to luring the peasants of Putumayo away from coca. Under pacts first signed a year ago, peasant families promise to pull up their crops in return for about $850, agricultural supplies, and advice on setting up a new, fully legal farm. But government workers are finding it takes time to put farm plans into practice and aid is taking time to arrive. After a long break, government planes started spraying operations in the Putumayo earlier in November. Targets include 25,000-38,000 acres (10,000-15,000 hectares) of freshly planted coca and 7,500 acres (5,000 hectares) of coca belonging to peasants who did not sign pacts. Some peasants in the area say that they signed pacts and were sprayed anyway. The campaign is set to continue for several weeks. The government is also spending about $100 million on roads and other infrastructure to break the historical isolation of the jungle region on the border with Ecuador. Peasants say that without roads they cannot send legal crops to market. Ironically, it was the Putumayo's remoteness which attracted many of the small farmers in the first place. The isolation and lack of government control made it a perfect place to plant drug crops when Colombia's cocaine boom began in the late 1970s and big time traffickers offered lucrative rewards to farmers from other parts of the country. - --- MAP posted-by: GD