Pubdate: Sat, 16 Feb 2002 Source: Economist, The (UK) Copyright: 2002 The Economist Newspaper Limited Contact: http://www.economist.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/132 DRUGS IN THE ANDES Spectres Stir in Peru Lima - Partly because of Plan Colombia, Peru's illegal drug industry is reviving. Meanwhile, Bolivians are protesting against drug eradication. The harder you squeeze the illegal drug industry in one part of the Andean region, the more it balloons out elsewhere. That has been the experience over the past quarter-century of the United States' "war" against the production of cocaine and, more recently, opium poppies in the Andes. Over the past year, with much American help and money, Colombia's government has stepped up the eradication of drug crops. So it is not surprising that there are now clear signs of an increase in the production of coca (the shrub from which cocaine is extracted) and poppies (the source of heroin) in Peru. These trends are worrying ones for the anti-drug warriors. On March 23rd George Bush is to make a flying visit to Peru, partly to show support for newly-restored democracy, but mainly to talk about fighting drugs and terrorism, and boosting trade, with President Alejandro Toledo and the leaders of other Andean countries. This visit comes as the tide in Peru is turning in favour of the drug traffickers once again. The country was the world's largest coca producer until the mid-1990s, when production shifted to Colombia. This week, the United States' government said that according to its estimates, Peru's coca crop last year covered 34,000 hectares (84,000 acres), a similar figure to that for 2000 despite the eradication of 6,000 hectares. But American officials admit that their tracking system (derived from satellite imagery and sample field checks) is poor at detecting young plants. By contrast, Ricardo Vega Llona, Peru's "drug tsar", reckons there are at least 50,000 hectares of coca; the UN's preliminary estimate is only slightly less (it put the figure at 44,000 hectares in 2000). As troubling as the figures is the fact that there are plenty of economic incentives for Peru's coca industry. The farm-gate price for coca leaves has risen to an all-time high of around $3.50 per kilo, against 40 cents at the low point in 1995. Coca is competitive against other crops at $1 per kilo. On the other hand, the price of coffee, the most obvious coca substitute for farmers on the tropical Andean slopes, has slumped to below the cost of production. The rise in the coca price may partly reflect an easing of repression. A policy of shooting down suspicious planes in eastern Peru was halted last year, after an American missionary and her baby were killed. (Peru wants to restart this air interdiction, which relies on American spy planes; American officials say they hope to announce a resumption during Mr Bush's visit). The fall of President Alberto Fujimori's authoritarian regime in 2000 revealed a web of corruption, including claims that Vladimiro Montesinos, his security adviser, took drug bribes. Since Mr Toledo took office last July, he has been busy trying to rebuild democracy and the economy, though Mr Vega Llona says traffickers are still being harried. Gangs based in Peru are starting to produce more cocaine themselves, rather than exporting semi-processed paste to Colombia. But Colombians seem to be behind the introduction of the opium poppy; unlike coca, it is not indigenous to Peru. Estimates of the crop are sketchy. But 135 hectares were eradicated last year (up from 26 in 2000). Poppies are easier to grow, more lucrative, and harder to detect than coca. They grow at higher altitudes, above the operating ceiling of police helicopters. To complicate matters, there are signs of a guerrilla revival in the drug areas. "Security has loosened slowly but steadily since the last years of the Fujimori regime," said Patrice Vandenberghe, the UN's anti-drug man in Lima. Under Mr Fujimori, many drug areas were under military rule. But facing budget cuts, and demoralised by allegations of corruption and human-rights abuses, the army has pulled back, closing bases in these areas (though the police are still present). Officials deny reports that Colombia's FARC guerrillas have infiltrated Peru, at least beyond the border area. But the tiny rump of Peru's Shining Path guerrillas, a big force a decade ago but now numbering perhaps 300 (not all armed), is expanding into a vacuum left by the army. Field workers have reported Shining Path incursions in the Monzon and Apurimac valleys: guerrillas have lectured villagers, given them provisions and pressganged youths. Without law and order, coca will thrive, but normal economic activity will not. The government is now taking steps to improve security. Fernando Rospigliosi, the interior minister, says he is asking the army to restore some of its bases (though not military rule). He is appointing new civilian "peace commissioners" to co-ordinate anti-terrorism efforts with civic bodies. And he plans to double the number of drug police based east of the Andes. But the government may find it hard to meet its target of eradicating 7,000 hectares of coca this year, without stirring violence. There are no police in the Monzon valley, for example; they could enter only "with blood and gunfire", says Mr Rospigliosi. Drug policy "can't be just repression, there has to be a proposal in it for the people too," he says. Mr Vega Llona is working on an overall plan, including alternative crops such as palm heart or cotton, and the infrastructure needed to make them viable. Just rebuilding Peru's jungle trunk roads would cost around $1 billion. American officials have acknowledged that Plan Colombia will affect the neighbours. The United States' Congress has tripled anti-drug aid for Peru this year, to $156m, including $30m to upgrade police helicopters for opium areas, and more than $80m for alternative development. Peruvian officials stress that the drugs trade is bad for democracy, security, the environment and health. "Drugs trafficking is not going to disappear as long as there are users," says Mr Vega Llona. "But we're going to squeeze it." Maybe so, but as always, this looks like an unequal fight. - --- MAP posted-by: Alex