Pubdate: Sun, 23 Feb 2003
Source: San Antonio Express-News (TX)
Copyright: 2003 San Antonio Express-News
Contact:  http://www.mysanantonio.com/expressnews/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/384
Author: Graham Gori, Associated Press
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/area/Bolivia
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)

BOLIVIAN DECISION COULD HURT U.S. DRUG WAR

LA PAZ, Bolivia - The president here is considering a plan to resume
cultivation of the raw ingredient in cocaine in a remote jungle basin - a
move the U.S. government fears would undermine what's viewed as its most
successful anti-drug program in South America.

President Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada is studying a proposal to allow
cultivation of coca in the Chapare region of central Bolivia to help calm
unrest among growers who've blockaded major highways and put their support
behind his political rival.

"We've begun serious dialogues with coca growers with the aim of combating
drug trafficking and maintaining said social tranquility," Ernesto
Justiniano, the vice minister of social defense.

Justiniano said the program would hurt drug traffickers by giving the
government more control over what's now a clandestine industry in the jungle
lowlands.

U.S. officials staunchly oppose the proposal to allow each grower in the
area to plant one-fifth of an acre of coca, saying it would undermine the
$1.3 billion effort to eradicate coca plantations from the region over the
past six years.

"Our policy is very clear and it remains clear," said an official at the
U.S. embassy who spoke only on condition his name not be used. "Any proposal
that would legitimize or legalize any coca in the Chapare - which is illegal
- - would be a violation of Bolivian law and a violation of international
treaties to which Bolivia is a signatory."

U.S. officials have said the proposal could trigger a halt in aid from the
United States and international lending agencies such as the International
Monetary Fund to South America's poorest nation.

It also could be used to exclude Bolivia from inclusion in a proposed
hemispheric free-trade zone backed by Washington.

Bolivia's government plans to conduct a study to determine the size of the
nation's limited legal coca market, which now is restricted to some 30,000
acres to supply indigenous people who chew the leaves, which act as a
stimulant and can stave off hunger.

American officials fear enlarging the area allowed for legal cultivation
would return Bolivia to the ranks of major cocaine producers.

All coca production in the Chapare - a jungle basin the size of New Jersey
that supplied half of all cocaine in the world five years ago - is illegal.

The leaf has been eradicated by U.S.-trained soldiers who often engage in
firefights with coca farmers.

Despite U.S. opposition, analysts say Bolivia's government has little
bargaining power with the coca growers, who stage frequent blockades along
the nation's largest highway at a time when the Bolivia's government is
struggling with an economic crisis.
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