Pubdate: Mon, 30 Sep 2002
Source: Washington Times (DC)
Copyright: 2002 News World Communications, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.washingtontimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/492
Author: Craig Mauro
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)

COCA SNUFFS OUT PERU FOREST

MONZON, Peru (AP) -- Swaths of scarred earth blanket the hillsides of this 
jungle valley -- the environmental consequence of a cocaine trade striving 
to meet demand in the United States and Europe.

Analysts estimate that nearly 6 million acres of Peruvian rain forest have 
been hacked down in the past three decades to grow coca, a shrub leaf that 
is the primary source of cocaine. More than 14,800 tons of toxic chemicals 
are dumped into the Amazon jungle every year as traffickers turn coca into 
raw cocaine paste.

Poisoned water, soil erosion, landslides and the extinction of plant and 
wildlife species are the immediate results. In a matter of decades, 
environmentalists warn, lush tropical valleys such as the Monzon could end 
up mostly desert.

"We're talking about one of the richest natural ecosystems in the world, 
and it's being destroyed piece by piece," said Jonathan Jacobson, an 
environmental specialist at the U.S. Embassy in Peru's capital, Lima.

The Monzon River valley stretches eastward for about 40 miles from the 
Andes mountains into high jungle that gradually gives way to the vast 
lowlands of the Amazon rain forest.

Dropping from 6,600 feet to 2,000 feet above sea level, the Monzon sits in 
a geographical region popularly known as the "eyebrow of the jungle." The 
varied altitude nourishes a wide range of plant and animal species, making 
the valley a hotbed for biological diversity.

Since the 1980s, however, the Monzon also has been a hotbed of the drug trade.

In 2001, it produced almost 20 percent of Peru's coca crop. It is the 
largest coca valley in the Upper Huallaga River region, a network of 
similar valleys that together constitute the most important drug-producing 
corridor in Peru.

The characteristics that provide for the Monzon Valley's natural beauty 
also make it ideal for coca growers.

The river cuts through steep hillsides, which provide well-drained soil 
best suited for growing coca. Access to the region is difficult, making it 
hard for police or soldiers to get to the hills, which begin about 200 
miles northeast of Lima.

Streams ripple across the dirt road that connects settlements of poor 
farmers with Tingo Maria, an outpost on the Huallaga River that was a 
cocaine boom town in the 1980s and 1990s.

Able to have their leaves picked four times a year, coca plants need 
exclusive use of soil, leading farmers to weed constantly and to overuse 
pesticides, said Raul Araujo, a forestry engineer at the National 
University of the Jungle in Tingo Maria.

A plot remains productive for four to 10 years, after which the land is 
useless, Mr. Araujo said. Farmers then abandon it to slash and burn another 
patch of forest for cultivation.

"Since they've used a lot of chemicals, the soil gets contaminated and 
unproductive," he said. "That makes it like a sterile desert, which is why 
we're talking about 100,000 to 120,000 hectares (250,000 to 300,000 acres) 
in the Upper Huallaga that are in the process of desertification."

The combination of constant harvesting, weeding and pesticide use on steep 
plots also results in more soil erosion than occurs with most crops, said 
Mr. Jacobson at the U.S. Embassy. The government estimates a quarter of 
deforestation in Peru has been caused by coca cultivation.

Of the country's coca-growing valleys, Monzon shows perhaps the most 
visible destruction. Patches of brown dirt cover the landscape like a 
quilt, with clefts where eroded soil has collapsed in landslides.

More damage lies beneath the surface.

Converting coca into cocaine requires soaking the leaves in a toxic soup of 
chemicals such as sulfuric acid, kerosene and organic solvents to create an 
intermediate form of raw cocaine paste.

The paste usually is exported from coca-growing valleys to be refined into 
cocaine elsewhere, leaving behind abandoned "marinating" pits under the 
jungle canopy. Chemicals seep into the groundwater, eventually 
contaminating streams and rivers.

People who lived in the Monzon 40 years ago say a net tossed into the river 
used to haul in a slew of fish. Today, they say, the fish are mostly gone.

Scientists must rely on such anecdotal evidence to estimate the damage 
because it is too dangerous to conduct comprehensive studies in an area 
overrun with hostile traffickers.

Most coca farmers in the Monzon valley refuse to acknowledge the crop is 
hurting the very environment that provides their livelihoods.

In any case, stopping the desperately poor agriculturists from cultivating 
coca will be difficult as long as there is demand for cocaine in rich 
countries.

Standing on his coca plot above the rushing Monzon River, Marcelino Ortiz, 
52, said coca fetches far more money than any legal crop.

"We're poor people in an underdeveloped country," he said. "And we'll sell 
coca to anyone who comes to buy it. Who knows where it's headed?"
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D