Pubdate: Fri, 27 Jun 2003 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2003 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Author: Sibylla Brodzinsky COLOMBIA HALTS DRUG ERADICATION TO DO HERBICIDE STUDY BOGOTA - A court has ordered the suspension of a U.S.-funded drug eradication program until the effects of the herbicide on human health and the environment can be scientifically established, according to a ruling made public Thursday. Government officials immediately said they would appeal the administrative court ruling to the State Council, the nation's highest court for government matters. Because the Colombian government is not legally bound to comply with the ruling while an appeal is underway, the government said it will continue spraying coca and opium crops throughout the country. ''There is an appeal [and] spraying continues,'' Vice President Francisco Santos told RCN radio. ``We would hope that the State Council understands that the war is the worst health problem here, and what finances the war are drug traffickers through the illegal crops.'' Both leftist rebels and right-wing paramilitary groups fighting in Colombia's 4-decade-old war reap huge benefits from the drug business, by ''taxing'' producers and directly engaging the processing and trafficking of cocaine and heroin. The United States, which has poured millions of dollars into the eradication program, was not immediately concerned with the ruling. Because the appeals process can take months and sometimes years, the possibility of any actual suspension in the spray program would be ''quite a ways off,'' a U.S. official said. In the June 13 ruling made public Thursday, the Administrative Court of Cundinamarca province ''orders the temporary suspension of aerial spraying with the herbicide glyphosate until studies on the effects of the chemicals are conducted,'' court president Estela Carvajal told The Herald in a telephone interview. While U.S. and Colombian officials argue that the weed-killer glyphosate is safe, farmers and indigenous groups on the ground say it has affected their health and has even killed off some livestock. Environmentalists claim that the large-scale spray program is also affecting waters sources and wildlife. Carvajal said that in addition to public health studies in rural areas that have been sprayed, the court ordered compliance with an environmental management plan to reduce spraying's impact on the ecosystem. While several court rulings have ordered suspensions of the spray program in the past, the government has successfully appealed each ruling and the herbicide continues to be used in eradication efforts. According to newly released figures, the aggressive spray program is beginning to make a dent in coca cultivation. A United Nations report published Wednesday said Colombia has seen a 37 percent decline in the cultivation of coca -- the main ingredient in cocaine -- over the past two years, reversing an eight-year trend of steady growth. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens