Pubdate: Mon 16 Apr 2001 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2001 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.herald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Author: Juan O. Tamayo SPRAYING PROMPTS EXAGGERATED TALES Officials Deny Farmers' Assertion That Drive Does Harm Far Afield LARANDIA, Colombia -- A visit to the area of Colombia where spraying is taking place against coca cultivations can prompt exaggerated tales about the effect of the operations. Coca farmers pointed at every dead bush and tree as a victim of glyphosate, including one tree obviously dead for years and a 200-foot ceiba tree. "Impossible. The small amount of glyphosate we use cannot kill even medium-sized trees," said Luis Parra, a Colombian forestry engineer who first proved in 1992 that the herbicide was effective in eradicating coca bushes. The spray had clearly killed patches of food crops planted within larger coca fields. And there were signs of the agricultural version of collateral damage -- withered sections of legal fields adjoining coca fields, for example. But there were also signs of significant spraying mistakes -- a vast and yellowed cow pasture near no visible coca, a three-acre plot of wilting corn at least 300 feet from the nearest coca bush. The coca farmers complained that the glyphosate had given their children severe stomach pains, bouts of vomiting, fevers and boils all over their bodies and had killed cows, dogs, chickens and fish. One doctor in the Putumayo town of La Hormiga reported treating six people with "the symptoms of glyphosate poisoning," but he later acknowledged he had never read any scientific reports on what those symptoms are. U.S. officials dismiss the charges as lies. "As their illegal lives have been affected by the spraying, these persons do not give objective information," said a recent State Department report to Congress. The spray program's computerized tracking system allowed its analysts to quickly dismiss at least half of the 100 or so complaints of wrongful spraying filed by farmers during the Putumayo campaign, Colombian officials said. "Show me a dead cat, a dog, a pig, anything. They say the animals are dying, but they never show the bodies," said army Gen. Mario Montoya, commander of a huge swath of Putumayo and neighboring Caqueta. Police Gen. Gustavo Socha, head of the counter-narcotics division, announced plans recently to establish two new aerial eradication bases with the nine new crop dusters bought with $115 million in U.S. aid. The added planes, glyphosate and aviation gasoline will allow the program to spray up to 197,600 acres of coca this year, compared to 143,440 acres last year, Socha said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth