Pubdate: Thu, 12 Dec 2002
Source: Sarasota Herald-Tribune (FL)
Copyright: 2002 Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Contact:  http://www.newscoast.com/apps/pbcs.dll/frontpage
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/398
Author: Ken Guggenheim, Associated Press Writer
Note: Associated Press writer Nestor Ikeda contributed to this story.
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)

U.S. Officials Reject Drug War Claims

U.S. anti-drug officials Thursday rejected lawmakers' claims that they are 
doing little to eradicate Colombia's opium, the raw material for most of 
the heroin sold in the United States.

Members of the House Government Reform Committee said a $1.8 billion 
anti-drug program in Colombia is so focused on eradicating coca, little is 
being done about opium. Fewer opium crops are being fumigated this year 
than before U.S. helicopters and other anti-drug aid began arriving two 
years ago.

The result has been a surge in heroin in the United States, lawmakers said. 
"Plain and simple, the heroin that is flooding the United States and is 
killing our citizens comes from Colombia," said Rep. Bob Barr, R-Ga. "It is 
a weapon of mass destruction and we must help the Colombian government 
eradicate it, before it gets to the United States."

A top State Department antidrug official, Paul E. Simons, told lawmakers 
that the United States is fighting opium as well as coca in Colombia.

"We know the enemy and what we need to do," he said. "We have assets in 
country deployed to do the job, and we have effective and strong leadership 
in Colombia prepared to do its part."

In 2000, pilots sprayed about 22,700 acres of opium. That figure fell to 
about 3,950 acres last year. U.S. officials hope to spray about 12,350 
acres this year. Simons said opium spraying was hindered last year by a 
lack of spray planes and pilots, interruptions in the flow of money and bad 
weather. With coca eradication requiring fewer resources than opium 
eradication, it was a higher priority.

In a visit Thursday to Washington, Colombia's foreign minister, Carolina 
Barco, noted the difficulty of fumigating opium.

Opium poppies "are cultivated at much higher altitudes than coca and we 
need to find ways to eradicate them and find economic alternatives" for 
opium farmers, she said.

Colombia accounts for most of the world's cocaine, but only a tiny fraction 
of its heroin. But almost all Colombian heroin is sold in the United 
States, mostly in the East. Cocaine is much more popular than heroin in the 
United States, but heroin accounts for more fatal overdoses.

Colombian heroin tends to be purer than the Mexican heroin that dominates 
the western United States. Because of its purity, it is often inhaled, 
making it more appealing to people who don't want to use needles.

Police and anti-drug officials say Colombian heroin is tied to what they 
see as increased use of the drug.

In Westmoreland County, Pa., near Pittsburgh, 12 people have died of 
overdoses this year, compared with five fatal overdoses over the five 
previous years, Detective Tony Marcocci, of the county's district 
attorney's office, said in his testimony.

Detective Sgt. Scott Pelletier of the Portland, Maine, Police Department, 
said heroin seizures and arrests have surged in his state.

"There has historically been a heroin problem in Maine, but over the last 
five years it has become nothing short of an epidemic," he said.
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MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager