Pubdate: Sun, 08 Jun 2003 Source: Sacramento Bee (CA) Copyright: 2003 The Sacramento Bee Contact: http://www.sacbee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/376 Author: T. Christian Miller, Times Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) COLOMBIA GROWING MUCH LESS COCA U.S.-Led Herbicide Spraying Has Cut Acreage Dramatically, U.N. Finds EL TOPACIO, Colombia -- For the first time in at least a decade, the amount of coca grown in Colombia is falling sharply, largely the result of an aggressive, U.S.-backed aerial fumigation campaign. Repeated spraying by crop dusters plus government programs to encourage farmers to pull up coca plants have reduced Colombia's coca, the source of cocaine, by 38% to 252,000 acres in the past three years, according to a United Nations study released this year. What's more, coca cultivation appears not to have simply moved elsewhere from Colombia, for years the source of 90% of the cocaine on U.S. streets, as it has in the past. While both Bolivia and Peru have reported slight increases, the rise has not been enough offset the decline in Colombia. The U.N. study found that throughout South America, the number of acres devoted to coca dropped 22% in the past three years. Although the program has not yet affected the street price of cocaine in the United States and its final success remains unclear, fumigation is working, according to interviews and visits conducted during a weeklong trip in the region around this small coca-growing town. "The fumigation has blasted everything," said Javier Yepes, a 40-year-old coca farmer who was rushing to harvest his plants after spray planes wiped out his neighbors' farm in a village in southern Colombia. Colombian President Alvaro Uribe, elected last year on a promise to crack down on the drug business and the leftist guerrillas it helps fund, has pledged to continue fumigating until there are no coca bushes left in Colombia. Within a year, many U.S. and Colombian officials expect that Colombia will cease to be a major producer of cocaine. U.S. officials are also publicly acknowledging what had long been private: that the U.S. spraying operations have become a key weapon in Colombia's 40-year-old internal conflict, which pits the army and an illegal paramilitary force against leftist rebels. Both the paramilitaries and the rebels rely on the coca trade for financing. "We're seeing a little bit of the money dry up," said Gen. James T. Hill, in charge of U.S. military operations in Latin America, during a congressional hearing last week. "The eradication effort is beginning to make some inroads in their ability to fund themselves." One result of the success is that Colombia and Mexico now are the dominant suppliers of heroin to the United States, supplanting Asia, authorities said. In the mountains of Tolima province, rebels of Colombia's largest guerrila group stand watch near opium farms that experts say help produce upward of 80 percent of the heroin that reaches U.S. streets. From Maine to California, law enforcement authorities report a rising rate of overdoses from a dangerously potent and cheap form of heroin. While total heroin use in the United States has not risen signifigantly, the drug is appealing to new, middle-class users because it can be smoked or snorted, rather than injected. Unlike coca, the plant used to make cocaine, opium poppies can be grown high in cloud-shrouded mountains and in ever smaller and scattered plots, experts and U.S. authorities say. When crop-dusters arrive with plant-killing spray, officials said, traffickers often open fire on them. Opium traffickers in Mexico have shot down three army helicopters this year. The success of the Satate Department's $1.3 billion Plan Colombia, which is intgended to halve coca production in Colombia, where migrants and poor farmers seized on coca as a steady, if illegal, source of income. Farmers are suddenly caught in the cross-fire of a vicious and unpredictable war between rebels and paramilitaries fighting over the remains of the cocaine trade. And Tens of thousands have fled the region, a vast exodus of poor, uneducated people looking for money to feed themselves in an economy in which unemployment hovers at 15%. "Yes, the spraying has been a success," said Jose Efren Villota, 48, as he surveyed the ruins of his once-profitable coca farm. "But it has come at a high cost." The idea behind Plan Colombia was simple: By cutting back on coca supply, State Department narcotics experts hoped to drive up street prices so high that addicts would cease using the drug and seek treatment. Instead, the price in the U.S. remains steady at anywhere between $20 and $200 per gram, depending on location and market conditions, according to recent congressional testimony from Drug Enforcement Administration officials. Critics of the plan say that cutting into cocaine production is simply forcing nimble drug traffickers to adjust. Users who cannot find cocaine are choosing other drugs, such as ecstasy, to satisfy their needs, reducing demand and therefore keeping the price stable. Coke dealers have switched to selling cheaper, easier-to-obtain drugs such as methamphetamine. "We have been forcing the drug economy to evolve," said Sanho Tree, a researcher at the Institute for Policy Studies who has been sharply critical of the war on drugs. "For decades, we have been selectively breeding super traffickers who adapt to market conditions very quickly with new substitutes." The effects of the program in Colombia -- on farmers trying to make a living and on the country's internal conflict -- are more clear-cut. Together, the guerrillas and paramilitaries are estimated to make between $150 million and $300 million per year from the coca trade, U.S. officials estimate. Both groups acknowledge "taxing" coca production about $100 per kilogram, or about 10% of the price at the local level. Both also have been accused of processing and trafficking the drug themselves. But they are now retreating in the face of a U.S.-backed offensive by the Colombian military, at least partly due to economic difficulties, according to military experts, State Department officials and interviews with paramilitaries. Guerrilla deserters have told military officials that they face shortages of ammunition and even food. Paramilitaries are now at war among themselves. Some are trying to remain in the coca business while others are trying to get out of it. "It's no mystery how we make our money: We charge a tax on the coca grown" here, said Alvaro, a paramilitary commander in El Tigre, a coca-growing town in the province of Putumayo, as his heavily armed men nervously patrolled a road near the site of a recent battle with guerrillas. "Of course [the spraying] has affected us." In Putamayo, hillsides once covered with the bright green leaves and neatly tended rows of healthy coca plants are now filled only with dying yellow bushes or new-grown jungle brush. Towns dedicated to the harvest and production of cocaine have been abandoned like ghost towns in the old American West, their stores empty, their people vanished. Of more than a dozen farmers interviewed in mid-May, not a single one planned to continue planting coca. Repeated visits by the crop dusters dropping glyphosate -- the chemical found in the commonly used herbicide Roundup -- wiped out the coca as well as nearby food crops and convinced them to give up the business. This represents a significant change from the past, when coca farmers would defiantly replant their fumigated fields. Until the recent drop, studies had indicated a steady increase in coca production in Colombia from the mid-1990s. Many coca farmers also say that the repeated spraying has sickened them, their children and their animals. Several studies conducted by the U.S. and Colombian governments have found no evidence to back up claims of long-term health damage. They say that the chemical has no long-term effects, and that coca processing, in which gasoline and sulfuric acid are frequently used, is far more damaging to the environment. The spraying also is pushing farmers back into poverty. In a country where the minimum wage is $1,200 a year, a coca farmer with three acres could clear almost 10 times that. For local families, it was a way to buy school uniforms or a motorcycle or an electric generator. Now, the boom is over and the money is gone. The New York Times contributed to this report. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom