Pubdate: Wed, 17 Jul 2002 Source: Messenger-Inquirer (KY) Copyright: 2002 Messenger-Inquirer Contact: http://www.messenger-inquirer.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1285 Author: Bill Moore U.S. KILLING INNOCENT PEOPLE IN AN INEFFECTIVE WAR ON DRUGS While the world is watching the Middle East, a terrible conflict is going on in Colombia. U.S. tax payers are paying for most of it. A terrible feature of the Colombian action is fumigation. Spraying of cocoa (cocaine) plants is so indiscriminate many other crops are destroyed; even animals and humans are often poisoned. Colombia is the largest cocaine producer, so we fumigate their farms. The U.S. is the largest marijuana producer, so why don't we fumigate our farms? One Colombia observer says: "Let's get serious about drugs. If fumigation works, let's fumigate parties where drugs are used, mansions of drug lords and banks where drug money is laundered." Peace groups in Colombia report the same patterns that took place in El Salvador and Guatemala in recent years: military and paramilitary groups attacking indigenous populations, who are the poor farmers hurt most by fumigation. It is that treatment of addicts is many times more effective at reducing cocaine use than trying to cut off supply. If supply can be cut off one place, a new source springs up. In 2001 assassinations of 157 labor leaders took place in Colombia , more than in the rest of the world. An average of 11 people daily die in Colombia's civil war, probably comparable to the number in Israel/Palestine. Most are civilians. I am angry and saddened that our country kills innocent people in a "war on drugs" that doesn't work. Bill Moore Owensboro - --- MAP posted-by: Alex