Pubdate: Fri, 17 Oct 2003
Source: Providence Phoenix (RI)
Copyright: 2003 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group
Contact:  http://www.providencephoenix.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/648
Author: Steven Stycos

ACTIVIST CITES HARM OF US POLICY IN COLOMBIA

US-financed aerial spraying of coca plants impoverishes small farmers and 
poisons children in rural Colombia, human rights leader Nancy Sanchez 
Mendez told students at the University of Rhode Island on Tuesday, October 14.

Calling the US drug eradication policy "a crime," Sanchez Mendez says 
indiscriminate spraying in the southern province of Putumayo destroys food 
crops and leaves small rural farmers and their families hungry. Even 
farmers who receive grants to grow legal crops have their land sprayed with  a herbicide made by the St. Louis-based Monsanto Company, she says.

Aerial spraying uses  in twice the concentrations allowed in the 
US, Sanchez Mendez adds, causing rashes, diarrhea, and vomiting among 
children who are exposed to the chemical. Since spraying began, Sanchez 
Mendez says, violence has also increased. Once their crops are killed, 
small farmers move elsewhere, she explains, and armed right-wing 
paramilitaries take over their land and homes. A better policy, Sanchez 
Mendez told a URI political science class, would finance hand-eradication 
of coca plants, blocking cocaine-processing chemicals from crossing the 
Ecuadorian border, and pursuing drug trade financiers.

Sanchez Mendez visited Rhode Island this week on a New England tour 
sponsored by Witness for Peace. The Washington, DC-based organization 
advocates for peace in Latin America, sending North American volunteers to 
conflict zones to discourage violence. A former journalist who currently 
works as a human rights investigator, Sanchez Mendez recently received the 
Letelier-Moffit Human Rights Award, an honor commemorating two human rights 
leaders assassinated in Washington, DC, by the Chilean secret police.

Colombia has been plagued by civil war since World War II. In 2002, 
according to Amnesty International USA, 4000 civilians were killed for 
political reasons by right-wing paramilitary forces and left-wing 
guerrillas. Another 500 people were "disappeared" by armed groups. Amnesty 
also estimates that during the first nine months of 2002, 350,000 
Colombians were displaced from their homes by violence and anti-drug efforts.

Major US involvement began under President Bill Clinton's "Plan Colombia." 
In 2000, the US sent almost $1 billion to Colombia, including funds to 
purchase helicopters from Providence-based Textron. Although the aid 
package was conditioned on human rights improvements, Clinton overrode the 
conditions, citing "national security." At the time, US aid was limited to 
stopping cocaine production, but in 2002, under prodding from President 
George W. Bush, Congress allowed Colombia to use American funds to fight 
two guerrilla groups. In 2003, the US will give Colombia $742 million in 
aid, estimates the liberal Center for International Policy, almost all for 
the military, police, and anti-drug enforcement.

"We all know the war against coca and against the small farmers is for 
other interests," Sanchez Mendez states. By forcing farmers from their 
homes, spraying enables wealthy Colombia families to control the oil-rich 
Putumayo region and eastern areas of Colombia that also have large oil 
reserves, Sanchez Mendez contends. American involvement in Colombia oil is 
certainly increasing. In February, Congress approved Bush's proposal for 
$93 million to protect an Occidental Petroleum pipeline in Colombia.

Sanchez Mendez urges Americans to question US Colombian policy, noting that 
World Bank loans and other forms of economic leverage allow the US to 
control the Latin American nation. "Essentially, we say our president is 
Bush," she says.
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