Pubdate: Sun, 11 Jan 2004 Source: Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL) Copyright: 2004 Sun-Sentinel Company Contact: http://www.sun-sentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/159 Author: Scott Wilson DRUG WAR FAILS TO BRING PEACE EL TIGRE -- Jose Efrain Mora lived in a house on the steep bluffs above the River Guamuez for 30 years until the night last month when a stranger's hands shook him awake. Members of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, the country's largest guerrilla insurgency, ordered him to get up, and he quickly awoke his wife and three children. Outside more than a dozen men, working quietly in the darkness, laced dynamite to the 350-foot bridge spanning the wide river below their house. The resulting explosion toppled the bridge from the bluffs, severing the economic lifeline that joined hundreds of farmers in southern Putumayo province with markets, food, and families. The roof of Mora's home caved in. Heavy seasonal rains have since left the detritus of a humble life -- two children's backpacks, a lady's worn white pumps, a shabby purse -- swimming in pools of water in the ruined bedroom. "They didn't want us dead, and in that sense I view them well," said Mora, 48, a farmer. "But just look at my house. I had nothing else." After more than a year of relative calm, Putumayo province is enduring a severe spike in violence, defying national trends. The war is rising despite a sharp decline in Putumayo's drug crops, reduced 93 percent after three years of intensive U.S.-financed aerial herbicide spraying. Colombian and U.S. authorities have long said that coca production provides the motivation and financial fuel for the country's nearly four-decade civil war. But the mixed results in a province that has been the chief venue of U.S. anti-drug assistance challenges that notion. It also shows the differences in what constitutes success, which the Bush administration measures as a swift reduction in drug crops, and the Colombian government envisions as a lasting peace. The FARC is an 18,000-member guerrilla group that promotes a Marxist solution to Colombia's economic imbalances. It has recently attacked oil wells, roads and bridges, military posts and police stations across Putumayo. Fighting for Puerto Asis, the province's commercial capital 25 miles east of this river town, left at least 30 people dead in November, including a 14-month-old boy killed by a bullet after it passed through his father's head. The death toll amounted to more than half the murders reported over the first 10 months of the year. The United States has delivered $2.4 billion in mostly military assistance to Colombia since 2000 in the hopes of crippling the drug trade. Colombian trafficking accounts for 90 percent of the cocaine reaching U.S. shores and funds two irregular armed groups -- the FARC and a rival paramilitary force that works alongside the army against the FARC. Coca, the key ingredient in cocaine, covered 163,000 acres of Putumayo in 2000 when the U.S. Congress approved the first phase of the aid package known as Plan Colombia. By the end of July 2003, fewer than 12,000 acres remained. Nationwide coca cultivation has dropped from 403,000 acres to 169,000 acres over that time, according to Colombian National Police figures. But less coca has not translated into less violence, the long-term Colombian objective, in Putumayo. Neither a new economy nor a stronger local government have taken hold, as envisioned by the anti-drug plan, and the military is still struggling to keep down a potent guerrilla force. Coca farmers who once expected sustained U.S. help to begin legal farms have instead moved into remote corners of the lightly governed region to replant illegal ones. Coca cultivation has increased in the Amazon River basin, south along the Ecuadoran frontier, and west bordering Nariqo province, which has replaced Putumayo as Colombia's biggest coca producer, according to national police figures. Much of the expansion has been directed by the FARC, now trying to shore up support in southern Colombia, where it has long derived much of its money and recruits, as it loses ground in other regions. Meanwhile, it is stepping up its defense of what little coca remains: Guerrilla groundfire has struck 94 spray planes this year, more than twice as many as in 2002, and brought down four of them. "It's a last stand," said Col. Carlos Malaver, director of planning and strategy of Colombia's National Police anti-narcotics division. "Once we get rid of all the coca, which we will, they must find new places to go. They'll have to move farther away from their markets and their territory, so there is resistance." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens