Pubdate: Fri, 16 Mar 2001 Source: Washington Post (DC) Copyright: 2001 The Washington Post Company Contact: 1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071 Feedback: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Author: Judy Mann http://www.mapinc.org/author/Judy+Mann WAGING CHEMICAL WARFARE IN COLOMBIA In the name of the war on drugs, the United States is spraying hundreds of square miles in Colombia with tons of herbicide in a grotesque magnification of a crop-eradication program that no prudent backyard gardeners would use on their suburban quarter-acre. Glyphosate -- the main active ingredient in the weedkiller Roundup -- is what is being used in the escalated fumigation effort against coca plants in southern Columbia. Since the program began Dec. 19, planes loaded with herbicide have sprayed an estimated 70,000 acres, beginning in Putumayo, where the campaign was waged over the objections of the governor and other elected officials. They raised a cry of concern in July about the hazards of planes blanketing the region, its people, livestock and fish with the herbicide, calling it "an attack against human life, the community and the environment." Roundup carries warnings on the container: "Caution: causes eye irritation. Avoid contact with eyes or clothing. Wash thoroughly with soap and water after handling." Under environmental hazards, the label says, "Do not apply directly to water." A Roundup Web site warns that the herbicide can be harmful to certain aquatic organisms. People and pets should stay out of a treated area until it is thoroughly dry. The manufacturer recommends that grazing animals, including cattle and fowl, remain out of the treated area for two weeks. The United States has supported spraying opium poppy, marijuana and coca for 20 years. As coca production increased in Colombia in the mid-1990s, so did the spraying. But a major escalation of spraying has now occurred as part of a $1.3 billion U.S. aid package called Plan Colombia. Hundreds of millions are going to be spent to buy U.S. military aircraft and to train Colombian security forces in anti-drug tactics. Colombia is now the third-largest recipient of U.S. aid. Part of the "aid" package is supposed to support efforts to develop other crops and other employment opportunities for the coca farmers. Initially, they were promised $4,000 each if they destroyed the coca plants and agreed to plant something else. That figure is now $1,000. In return, the government pledged not to fumigate their land. This package was sold to the American people as the way to reduce U.S. consumption of cocaine. Schemes that can be wrapped up in "I'm hard on drugs" packaging are much easier to promote than getting Americans involved in another civil war. But a civil war has been going on in Colombia for several decades, and guerrillas now dominate the countryside where coca production is concentrated. In recent years, the rebels have been taxing coca farmers to finance their insurrection. Under the drug war plan, some 500 U.S. military advisers will be deployed to train the Colombian military in how to seize coca farms, destroy crops and shut down drug labs. In effect, they will be helping Colombia's weak central government wage its war against the guerrillas. This raises echoes of Vietnam, where we sent in advisers and lost 55,000 American lives. This week, four governors from southern Colombia came to Washington to ask policymakers to stop the fumigation, which they say has harmed humans, livestock and destroyed legal crops that are essential to the farmers' subsistence. Further, they said the social aid has been slow in getting to farmers. The governors say they are against illegal crops. They want to involve their communities in manual crop destruction and in development programs that will give farmers alternatives. Winifred Tate, a senior fellow at the Washington Office on Latin America, a public policy and advocacy organization, spent 10 days in Colombia in January. Fumigation, she says, is a "completely ineffective way of reducing drug production and trafficking. Drug production in the Andes has remained constant. The programs have just moved it into other areas. The major area now is the Colombian Amazon. What we're doing now is spraying tons of pesticides into the Colombian Amazon," its soil and its watershed. People, too, are being fumigated, Tate said. "So you have health problems, primarily respiratory and skin problems, particularly in children. The destruction of food crops is leading to . . . concern about having enough to eat," she said, adding that people are being displaced because they've lost their food and livelihood. Linda Farley, the American Birds Conservancy science officer, warned shortly before the program began that glyphosate's "long-term ecological effects are severe," especially for fish. Much of the coca cultivation occurs along waterways in the Colombian Amazon, threatening aquatic life there and downstream in Ecuador and Brazil. Furthermore, as farmers move deeper into the forest, they cause deforestation that threatens the habitat of most of the endangered birds in Colombia. It is remarkable that the United States, which sprayed Vietnam with Agent Orange, could proceed with a widespread, intensive fumigation program in another country without knowing the long-term effects on humans, vegetation, livestock, birds and fish. It is cruel and inhumane for us to try to solve our drug problem -- which is one of demand -- by attacking the livelihoods and environment of peasant farmers without providing them with other ways to make a living. But that's exactly what we're doing. In 1998, Congress allocated $15 million over three years for alternative development in Colombia. Only a half-million had been spent by late 1999, according to a report written by Tate. Meanwhile, aid to the military came close to $300 million in that year alone. It is typical of the heavy-handed way we conduct much of our foreign policy: We turn to the military first and drag our feet on the social and economic development programs that could get to the heart of the conflict. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake