Pubdate: Thu, 22 Apr 2004
Source: Bozeman Daily Chronicle (MT)
Copyright: 2004 The Bozeman Daily Chronicle
Contact:  http://news.mywebpal.com/index.cfm?pnpid=311
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1686
Author: Gail Schontzler, Chronicle Staff Writer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/herbicides

WAR ON DRUGS IN COLOMBIA SPARKS DEBATE

Spraying tons of chemical herbicides over Colombia has failed to make
a dent in the cocaine supply to the United States, and it's ruining
the lives of ordinary farmers, says a peasant organizer from the
war-wracked country.

Miguel Cifuentes, 30, executive secretary of the Cimitarra River
Valley Peasant Association, criticized the $2 billion U.S. war on
drugs in Colombia on Tuesday at the Christus Collegium in Bozeman.

About 35 people attended the talk, sponsored by the Montana Human
Rights Network, Bozeman Collective and Bozeman Peace Seekers.

Twenty-five times more Americans die from smoking tobacco each year
than die from drugs, Cifuentes argued.

"Why don't they decide to fumigate the tobacco fields?" Cifuentes
asked. His remarks were translated from Spanish by Scott Nicholson of
Missoula, a Montana Human Rights Network organizer.

America has supported indiscriminate spraying of the Monsanto
herbicide Round-Up, which destroys far more corn and food crops than
drugs, Cifuentes charged. It sickens many peasants, particularly
children and the elderly, hurting their eyes, breathing, stomachs and
skin.

To survive economically, peasants have little choice but to grow
poppies and coca plants, he said. When one drug crop is sprayed, the
peasants simply cut down forests and plant more drugs.

Cifuentes argued the peasants are caught in the middle, victims of
free trade agreements that hurt the local farm economy, victims of
drug traffickers, victims of spraying and victims of right-wing
paramilitary groups.

He blamed the paramilitaries for the gruesome deaths and disappearance
of hundreds of people, and blamed the government for creating the
paramilitaries.

Peasant organizers like himself and human rights activists have been
falsely accused of collaborating with leftists guerrillas, Cifuentes
said. He said he was attacked last year by men firing at his boat, but
managed to escape.

Cifuentes argued that the U.S. war on drugs is in reality an excuse to
intervene in Colombia and help U.S. corporations gain control of his
country's oil, gas, coal and gold.

Don Hargrove, a retired Air Force officer and former Republican state
senator, disagreed strongly with the notions that the war on drugs is
a sham, or that Colombia's government supports the paramilitaries.

Hargrove said he had worked in Colombia for five years as a civil
contractor assisting in the war on drugs.

"It's vicious, it's evil, it hurts people," Hargrove said of drug
trafficking, adding that he personally knew hundreds of honest police
officers who had been killed for fighting drugs.

Hargrove, who now serves on the Montana Parole Board, said almost
every inmate has been involved with drugs. "If we could get rid of
drugs, Montana could close its jails."

The two men agreed on one thing -- that demand for drugs among
Americans and Europeans must be attacked.

Nicholson asked people to sign petitions urging their senators to
oppose spraying in Colombia, free trade and funding to Colombia's military. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake