Pubdate: Wed, 9 Jan 2002 Source: Associated Press (Wire) Copyright: 2002 Associated Press Author: Margarita Martinez COLOMBIA CANDIDATE: DRUG WAR FAILING BOGOTA, Colombia ---- A leading Colombian presidential candidate says drug trafficking is thriving despite U.S.-backed efforts to crush it, and she called for an international drug summit to rethink failing strategies. "They're inadequate; drug trafficking keeps advancing, it keeps financing our conflict and creating an economy which is very damaging to democracy (and) its institutions," Noemi Sanin said in an interview with The Associated Press. Despite an inauspicious launch of her campaign on Oct. 30, in which she fainted while delivering a speech in a sweltering meeting hall, Sanin is running second in the polls. Liberal Party candidate Horacio Serpa is running about 12 points ahead of Sanin -- an independent -- in the runup to the May 26 presidential elections. Sanin, 52, has a reputation as a sophisticated politician, but one unafraid to speak her mind. As Colombia's foreign minister in the early 1990s, she once lashed out at the U.S. State Department amid suggestions in Washington that Colombia was coddling drug traffickers. She reminded U.S. officials that the lives of hundreds of Colombians had been sacrificed in the drug war. Sanin is equally blunt today in assessing results of the war on drugs. "We're not winning the war against drug trafficking -- not even close," she told AP on Tuesday. "And we're losing many battles." Echoing a call by President Andres Pastrana, whose term expires in August and who is barred by law from seeking re-election, Sanin said an international summit should be held to reassess counterdrug strategy. The theme is urgent now for Colombia, because leftist rebels who have been waging a 38-year civil war in Colombia are financed by production of cocaine and heroin, Sanin noted. "If we could cut the veins of their drug-trafficking financing, the conflict would not be able to endure," she said. More than 80 percent of the world's cocaine comes from Colombia, despite years of U.S.-backed interdiction efforts and aerial fumigation of the nation's coca plantations. Heroin production is rising, and most heroin now consumed in the United States comes from this South American country. Sanin labeled as "terrorists" Colombia's three main illegal armed groups -- the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia and the National Liberation Army, both left-wing insurgencies, and the right-wing United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia. But she said that if elected president, she would be willing to negotiate with all three. "You negotiate with terrorists -- you don't negotiate with your own friends," she said. Pastrana's government has held peace talks for three years with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, but they have produced few results. He is opening talks with the National Liberation Army but has ruled out negotiations for now with the right-wing paramilitary group. If no candidate wins a first-round majority in the elections, a second round will be held on June 16 among the two leading candidates. If elected, Sanin would be Colombia's first woman president. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh