Pubdate: Wed, 27 Aug 2003 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2003 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: Juan Forero Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/colombia.htm (Colombia) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) COLOMBIANS TRAVEL MORE FREELY AS LEADER'S POLICIES PAY OFF HONDA, Colombia, Aug. 7 - A year ago, Carlos Roa, like any middle-class businessman from Bogotá, would not have dared venture onto the highway between Bogota and Medellín that winds past this baking-hot town in the Magdalena River valley. This central region of copper-colored canyons and fields of scrub grass had, after all, been guerrilla country, where leftist rebels often kidnapped middle-class Colombians who traveled out of the city. But today, Mr. Roa drove past here and beyond without a hint of worry, just another member of a 120-car convoy escorted by heavily armed policemen on high-powered motorcycles. "I had stopped traveling because of the risks," said Mr. Roa, 40, wiping the sweat off his brow after stopping at a roadside stand. "You feel like you are taking back the countryside, like it is ours again." The caravans, like so many security measures introduced in recent months, were a brainstorm of President Álvaro Uribe, the Oxford-educated technocrat who was inaugurated a year ago after pledging to make this country safer. Colombia is still a violence-racked nation, causing deep concern to policy makers in Washington. But increasingly Mr. Uribe's policies - from sending more troops into the field to installing civilian intelligence networks to creating a war tax to pay for a military buildup - appear to be working. Kidnappings for the first six months of this year have dropped 26 percent, and homicides have fallen by 23 percent, compared with the same period last year. Colombia's vast fields of coca, the plant used to make cocaine, have decreased by 15 percent, the first sign of success in the United States' three-year, $2.5 billion effort to stem drug production. Mr. Uribe has also embarked on nascent peace talks with right-wing paramilitary militias, a process that could remove those violent insurgent groups from a 39-year-old conflict. As a result, Mr. Uribe's popularity rating, at 70 percent in one recent poll, is the highest for any leader of a major Latin American country save for Néstor Kirchner, Argentina's new president. No one suggests that Colombia, a major regional ally of the United States, is yet safe. More than 11,000 people were killed nationwide in the first six months of the year; Marxist rebels continue to control wide swaths of countryside; and armed groups have abducted more than 1,000 people since January. Terror bombings in rural areas are not uncommon. [In the past three days at least six people have been killed in three separate car bombings, Agence France-Presse reported.] Human rights groups also say that Mr. Uribe has failed to cut ties between the army and the paramilitary death squads, and they worry that antiterrorism legislation the president proposes could lead to rights abuses. Still, Mr. Uribe's programs have for the first time given people in this country of 42 million a glimmer of hope after years of political and criminal violence that brought Colombia to the edge of chaos. American officials from President Bush to Secretary of State Colin L. Powell have showered Mr. Uribe with praise while promising more aid. Indeed, the Bush administration is likely to provide an additional $700 million in mostly military assistance next year. "The results of a year of his hard work are, I would say, breathtakingly impressive," said John Walters, the White House drug policy chief. "I don't think there is another period of time in the last 25 to 50 years where you see this kind of change for the better." Political experts say Mr. Uribe has drawn support by adopting a style and method of governing that has broken with the laid-back approach of past presidents. His is a workaholic administration. Mr. Uribe is often at his desk before dawn. He also pushes his aides and cabinet ministers hard, going so far as to demand, publicly, better results. Mr. Uribe is also known for sometimes quirky, symbolic acts that have struck a chord with Colombians. Last month, he moved his entire cabinet to Colombia's most violent province for three days to demonstrate that he could govern in the most ungovernable of regions. On weekends, he presides over town hall meetings where Colombians can call in as they watch on television to complain directly to the president. Critics say his style reigns over substance. But many political experts who closely follow this government say that Mr. Uribe is obsessed with seeing improvements. "There is a blend of symbolism, but there are clearly results," said Michael Shifter, a senior analyst for the Inter-American Dialogue, a Washington-based policy group. "He's not somebody who could easily be accused of being interested in image and illusion. He's the most practical guy, and is interested in tangible, concrete results." The results can, to be sure, be seen along this highway, which winds through fog-shrouded Andean mountains from Bogotá to the country's most important river valley. In recent years, with rebels running rampant, roadside business had dried up as travelers avoided the highway. But today, a holiday on which Colombians celebrated a decisive battle in the war for independence, restaurants bustled with travelers and shop owners did a brisk business selling sodas and trinkets, attributing it to the government-organized caravans, which leave urban areas at appointed times on holiday weekends. "The guerrillas no longer come out," said Ramiro Ocampo, 39, the owner of the Campoverde Hotel in the town of Doradal, where dozens of motorists stopped for lunch. "The army is all over the place now, so it is much, much safer." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin