Pubdate: Sat, 03 Mar 2001 Source: Pawtucket Times (RI) Website: http://www.pawtuckettimes.com Address: 23 Exchange St., Pawtucket RI 02860 Contact: 2001 The Pawtucket Times Author: Milton Valencia ACTIVIST QUESTIONS U.S. INVOLVEMENT IN COLOMBIAN DRUG WAR CENTRAL FALLS -- Anti-war activists say a $1.3 billion United States' investment against drug trafficking in Colombia is actually a scheme to aid paramilitary groups fighting revolutionaries. "There's no 'Plan Colombia' against death squads, only poor people and guerrilla groups, and we're against that," said Teresa Gutierrez, chair of the International Action Center's U.S. Out of Colombia Committee. Gutierrez spoke before a crowd of city residents at Progreso Latino Friday, many of them Colombian immigrants, discussing what she called facts in the U.S.' "Plan Colombia." Instituted by former President Bill Clinton, and continued by President George W. Bush, Plan Colombia appropriates $1.3 billion in U.S. funds to the administration of Colombian President Frank Pastrana to help in the war on drugs, Gutierrez said. But she said 80 percent of the money is actually used to train the Colombian military, and to fund war supplies and equipment. In Colombia, there is a 40-year-old civil war between the Colombian government and social activists and guerrilla groups. Two major revolutionary groups have emerged to gain popularity among the poor: the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia -- People's Army, and the National Liberation Army. Those groups continue to gain popularity and ground, consuming 40 percent of Colombian land while negotiations with the government continue. Many join the rebel groups to fight poverty, unfair employment and what they called a corrupt government. Yet the Pastrana government, Gutierrez said, has used the money for its paramilitary groups -- many who belong to and are actually trained by the government's military -- to fight the rebels. Money is used to detect the rebels' communication, and for warfare. Gutierrez said there has been more than 100 massacres against rebels and community activists within the last month, many of them unarmed, she said. "Hardly anyone from Colombia likes Plan Colombia," she said. "Once again, the U.S. government allies itself with a corrupt government whose military and paramilitary operations are virtually indistinguishable." Founded by former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark, the International Action Center sent a team of delegates to Colombia in November to interview guerrilla groups and peasants. "What is so horrible is the depth of repression in Colombia," Gutierrez, one of the delegates, said. ""To march against Plan Colombia is to endanger one's life." She said Plan Government has allowed for the spraying of a microherbiside over drug fields. That same chemical, she said, was outlawed in Florida because its longterm effects were unknown and scientists said it was too dangerous. Yet the Colombian government is spraying it over peasants' fields, where the rebel groups are, she said. "This spray isn't for the drugs," she said, "this is getting into the people's crops, food, and their water." "None of this is going to help the Colombian people." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens