Pubdate: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 Source: Ft. Worth Star-Telegram (TX) Contact: 2002 Star-Telegram, Fort Worth, Texas Website: http://www.star-telegram.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/162 Author: Kevin G. Hall, Knight Ridder News Service Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) BOLIVIA MAY SOFTEN STANCE AGAINST COCA-GROWING COCHABAMBA, Bolivia - Bolivia's government is preparing to ease its unpopular effort to eradicate coca and allow farmers to grow the raw material from which cocaine is made. The move, which could come within a week, would be a sharp reversal of Washington's only success in curbing drug production in South America's Andean region. U.S. officials fear that any increase in legal coca production would also be an opening to greater illicit sales. The United States has given Bolivia more than $1.3 billion in counter-narcotics and development aid since 1993. However, embattled Bolivian President Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada promised as a campaigner to review the coca-eradication policy, and his leading opponents are pro-coca. Separately, the presidential Cabinet resigned Tuesday. It was unclear when Sanchez de Losada would replace them. Government negotiators and coca growers came to a tentative agreement on coca-growing last week in Cochabamba, even as 29 people died in clashes between troops and striking police and protesters. The proposed coca deal, which Sanchez de Lozada is reviewing, would allow roughly 15,000 Bolivian farmers in Bolivia's tropical Chapare region to grow a catu of coca -- about a fifth of an acre -- during a six-month period equal to two harvests, said Bolivian anti-drug czar Ernesto Justiniano. During the six-month period, a study would be undertaken to determine how much demand there is for legal uses of coca. Many Bolivians chew coca legally as a stimulant, appetite suppressant or to cope with exertion at high altitudes. Bolivia now allows about 30,000 acres of legal coca in the Yungas region outside La Paz to meet that need. The United States insists that no more coca-growing can be justified. Bolivia is the only South American success story in the U.S.-led war on drugs. Since 1998, it has eradicated more than 148,000 acres of coca, reducing illicit cocaine production from 234 tons a year to less than 8 tons annually. The president wants peace with the cocaleros, as Bolivia's coca-growing alliance is known. The cocaleros increasingly are forming armed self-defense groups to fight back against U.S.-trained Bolivian soldiers who use U.S. satellite technology to identify and forcibly uproot illicit coca. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager