Pubdate: Sun, 25 Mar 2001 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Copyright: 2001 Globe Newspaper Company Contact: P.O. Box 2378, Boston, MA 02107-2378 Feedback: http://extranet.globe.com/LettersEditor/default.asp Website: http://www.boston.com/globe/ Author: Karl Penhaul COLOMBIANS ENDURE FALLOUT FROM ANTI-COCAINE OFFENSIVE IBERIA, Colombia - Three-year-old Mauricio Lopez spends most of his day playing with a plastic model airplane. He says it's like the real planes - US-donated crop dusters - that dump little drops of powerful defoliant on the drug fields around this one-street hamlet in southern Putumayo Province. The youngster can just about pronounce his own name and count to five. But the only full sentence he has mastered so far is this: ''The helicopters killed my daddy.'' Mauricio has muddled the facts a bit. But he does know that the last five months of his short life have been marred by violence and destruction from Plan Colombia - a Colombian government offensive to wipe out the booming cocaine trade in Communist guerrilla power using $1.3 billion in mostly US military aid. In November, Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia guerrillas stormed Siberia and seized Mauricio`s father on suspicion of being an informant for the rival right-wing paramilitary gangs that flourished in the region before the US-backed antidrug offensive. On the outskirts of the town, the rebels clashed with paramilitary gunmen backed by two army helicopter gunships, according to Mauricio's mother, Lupe Lopez. In their rush to flee, the guerrillas peppered their captive with bullets and dumped the corpse on a roadside, she said. Then in December, a fleet of helicopters and crop dusters began spraying glyphosate on crops of coca leaf - the raw material for cocaine - here in the Guamuez Valley, in the western portion of Putumayo, the province responsible for about half of Colombia's 520-ton annual cocaine output. By the end of last month, the army and police had sprayed almost 75,000 acres of coca plantations in the province. Withered fields of corn, plantains and yucca and scorched pastures demonstrate how the eradication program occasionally wipes out the legal subsistance crops. Since spraying began, the region's inhabitants have been surviving largely off food imported from neighboring Ecuador as well as irregular shipments of government relief parcels. ''Plan Colombia is a plan of destruction,'' declared resident Irma Galarza, looking over the browned remains of what had been healthy corn, alongside a small patch of coca. ''We're ready to change but only if the government helps us,'' she added, expressing a familiar complaint among Putumayo's inhabitants: that the government began destroying drug crops, the region's only cash crop, before it set up crop substitution programs. But even those who voluntarily eradicated drug crops under previous deals with the government suffered in the latest spraying campaign. Moises Burbano took out a low-interest, $4,000 government loan in the mid-1990s and replaced his coca crops with cattle pastureland. That pasture has now been destroyed by the glyphosate. ''Why work all your life when the government destroys all your achievements in just three days?'' he asked. The government has signed alternative development pacts with several thousand peasant families throughout Putumayo that should guarantee a $2,500 subsidy for each family that agrees to pull up the coca bushes. But so far, the plan has not gotten off the ground because funds for the subsidy have not filtered to the local level. Crop damage is not the only side effect. Doctors reported a flurry of health problems in the immediate aftermath of the spraying. A doctor, Efrain Estrada, said at least 30 percent of the 1,500 inhabitants in the village of El Placer suffered rashes, breathing problems and vomiting in the days immediately after the spray planes passed over. Many people have migrated, most drifting to larger cities such as Pasto, Neiva and Cali, where they rely on handouts and the promise of a bed from relatives or friends. Of all the crops in the Guamuez Valley, coca has suffered perhaps the least. In many areas, the characteristic bright green leaves can be seen growing back on hardy Peruvian and Bolivian varieties of the shrub. ''It will take more than that to finish the coca,'' said resident Aura Gomez, sitting in a small restaurant in Siberia. ''But when they do kill the coca, then that really will mean the start of all-out war.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Andrew