Pubdate: Fri, 11 Jun 2004 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2004 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/82 Author: Gary Marx Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/opium OPIUM FARMS DEFY U.S.-BACKED EFFORTS Interdiction Has Hurt Coca Farmers, But Colombia's Poppy Cultivation Has Kept Stable, Boosting Chicago's Status As America's Heroin Capital EL CONGRESO, Colombia -- High in the lush Colombian mountains, Francisco Pelaez is scratching out a living growing opium poppies. For a decade, the 33-year-old farmer has cultivated the delicate flower whose green bulb oozes a sticky latex that is processed into the potent heroin wreaking havoc in Chicago and much of America. "Opium is bad for people, but what am I going to do?" asked Pelaez, standing in a jungle clearing dotted with bright pink poppies. "If there was something else to grow, I wouldn't touch it." For Pelaez, cultivating opium in this isolated sliver of Huila province is the only way to feed his wife and children. But for the United States, it stands as a direct challenge to an aggressive anti-narcotics program that has achieved remarkable success. In Colombia, a huge U.S.-funded aerial fumigation program backed by President Alvaro Uribe cut the cultivation of coca--the plant from which cocaine is derived--by 21 percent in 2003. Overall, coca production in the key Andean nations of Colombia, Peru and Bolivia is at its lowest level since estimates began in 1986, according to U.S. officials. Yet experts say sustaining the success in coca eradication will be difficult as traffickers adopt new measures to counter the cadre of U.S. contractors flying herbicide-spraying missions across this vast South American nation. The challenges are even more daunting in the effort to destroy the opium crop in Colombia, which along with Mexico now dominates the U.S. heroin market--even though the two nations represent only a fraction of worldwide production, according to law-enforcement authorities. Opium production John Walters, director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, told a U.S. congressional subcommittee in March that Colombian opium production has "remained relatively constant" in the past five years despite fumigation and other anti-narcotics programs. "Colombian heroin dominates the heroin supply in the Northeast and Southern United States, while Mexican heroin predominates in the West," Walters said. Unlike coca, a lowland crop traditionally grown on large tracts, Colombian opium is cultivated on plots of 1 acre or less, along steep mountainsides that often are treacherous to fumigate, experts say. Interdiction also is difficult as traffickers smuggle the processed heroin into the U.S., 1 or 2 kilograms at a time, aboard commercial aircraft or in trucks or automobiles. Many traffickers wrap the heroin in latex packets and swallow them to avoid detection. By comparison, cocaine frequently is smuggled in multi-ton shipments aboard speedboats and other vessels. "Think of where you can put a large shipment of heroin--it's the size of a bag of flour," said one U.S. Embassy official in Colombia. Chicago Police Sgt. Joseph Del Pilar, a member of the High-Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas task force, said heroin busts of a kilogram or more are rare, and Colombian heroin is increasingly common in the metropolitan area. Del Pilar said the heroin--transported by Mexican cartels and hawked in open-air markets by Chicago street gangs--is far more potent than it was years ago, enabling users to snort rather than inject the drug and creating new demand among suburban youths and others less likely to try the drug if it were injected. In Chicago, a kilogram of white heroin from Colombia or Asia sells for $90,000 or more--about five times the value of cocaine, the officer said. Colombian farmers like Pelaez get about $4,000 for the raw material to make 1 kilogram of heroin. "Chicago is the hub, and from here it's distributed to Milwaukee, Detroit, the collar counties and rural areas," Del Pilar said. "You get a dime bag [$10 worth] of heroin and snort it, and you are a heroin addict." According to federal statistics, Chicago is the heroin capital of the United States, leading the nation in heroin-related emergency room visits for five consecutive years. Nationally, the number of heroin users remains small compared with those of other drugs such as marijuana and cocaine. Yet about 40,000 Americans younger than 18 tried heroin for the first time in 2001, compared with just 8,000 in 1993, according to the most recent national survey. The number of Americans 18 and older trying heroin also jumped, from 24,000 in 1990 to more than 100,000 a decade later. "Heroin has raised its not-so-pretty head," said Leah Young, spokeswoman for the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, a federal agency that conducts a nationwide drug abuse survey. Overshadowed by cocaine Opium has long been overshadowed in Colombia by cocaine, which drug lords such as Pablo Escobar turned into a multibillion-dollar global enterprise. Colombia produces 80 percent of the cocaine consumed in the U.S., but aerial fumigation--financed under the $2.5 billion anti-narcotics program known as Plan Colombia--has all but eliminated large-scale production, experts say. Nonetheless, success has brought new challenges. Fumigation has become more difficult as farmers turn to growing the bright-green coca bushes in smaller plots of several acres, often in remote areas. Armed insurgents who control much of Colombia's narcotics trade also are aggressively targeting the spraying missions--hitting the crop dusters 400 times with ground fire last year, double the number of hits the year before. In 2003, four spraying planes crashed, and two pilots were killed, including a Costa Rican whose aircraft was shot down. Only one spray plane crashed the year before. "It's a dangerous business in terms of security," the U.S. Embassy official said. "They are always changing, and we are forced to adapt." The same official said traffickers have adjusted to fumigation by moving 10 percent of Colombia's coca crop inside the nation's national parks--a figure that the top UN drug expert in Colombia said is exaggerated. So far, the Colombian government has not permitted fumigation inside the parks because of concern among some Colombians and international experts about the harmful effects of the herbicide glyphosate on the environment. U.S. officials support fumigation in the parks, as does Colombian Vice President Francisco Santos, who argued that the damage caused by coca growers razing parkland to plant illicit crops far exceeds the potential harm of the defoliant. "If we don't spray the parks, they will be so full of coca that they will be gone within two years," Santos said in an interview. Fumigating opium is even more problematic because the plant is grown in tiny plots, often hidden among legal food crops. Opium grows only in mountainous regions, which are buffeted by high winds and offer poor visibility. The herbicide will miss its target if the wind is too strong. Cloud cover can close in the mountains for days and prevent the crop dusters from taking off. "There are weeks that we can only fumigate one or two days," said Colombian National Police Capt. Delfin Murillo, a veteran helicopter pilot who flies security missions with the spray planes. Still, Walters of the Office of National Drug Control Policy told lawmakers that 7,410 acres of opium in Colombia were sprayed last year, along with an additional 2,470 acres that were voluntarily eradicated through programs that pay opium farmers to switch to legal crops. He said the combined efforts in Colombia and Mexico destroyed more than 70 percent of the potential opium crop and helped keep production in check. In El Congreso, a smattering of wood shacks along a dusty mountain road about 200 miles southwest of Bogota, community leaders say many farmers have abandoned opium not because of fumigation but because the price of opium latex has fallen by more than half in recent years. Yet they warned that opium cultivation will increase sharply if the price of latex rebounds and farmers are not provided an alternative way to make a living. Pelaez, the opium farmer, is not waiting for a higher price to expand his production, which brings in several thousand dollars annually. Walking along a soggy jungle path, the peasant stopped next to a twisted pile of felled trees along a riverbank. "I cut the trees to grow more opium," he said, gazing at the scarred landscape. "What else can I do?" - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin