Pubdate: Thu, 22 Dec 2005 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2005 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division, Hearst Newspaper Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198 Author: John Otis, Houston Chronicle South America Bureau Cited: Drug Policy Alliance http://www.drugpolicy.org Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Evo+Morales Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Bolivia Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?179 (Nadelmann, Ethan) LIKELY NEW BOLIVIAN LEADER OUT TO CHANGE THE DRUG WAR He Champions Non-Narcotic Uses of Cash Crop Coca LA PAZ, BOLIVIA - Pointing to a bag of chalky green powder in her living room, Silvia Rivera described the substance as flour made from coca, a plant more often associated with cocaine than baking supplies. "I use it to make lasagna noodles," said Rivera, a drug-policy adviser to Evo Morales, the leftist poised to become Bolivia's next president. "They're scrumptious." With Rivera's help, Morales hopes to radically change the nature of the drug war in Bolivia, the source of 16 percent of the world's cocaine. Morales has promised to crack down on cocaine traffickers. But he also has campaigned against a U.S.-funded effort to uproot fields of coca in a decadelong drive that has led to violent protests and scores of deaths. Coca plants provide the main ingredient of cocaine as well as the leaves that Quechua and Aymara Indians have chewed for centuries to ward off hunger and fatigue. Many Bolivians view the plant as sacred. Morales would encourage farmers to grow coca to make teas, soft drinks, holistic medicines and other traditional products. An Aymara Indian who grows the leaf himself, Morales, 46, also would like to export coca-based goods. Some analysts say that Morales' blueprint would lead to more cocaine production, an outcome that might prompt the U.S. to reduce aid to Bolivia, the poorest country in South America. "It makes sense to assume that if you produce more coca, more will be diverted to the illegal market," said Eduardo Gamarra, a Bolivian who heads the Latin America and Caribbean Center at Florida International University. U.S. Wary of Changes Referring to Bolivia's drug policies, U.S. Ambassador David Greenlee said recently that "if there are changes for the worse, Bolivia will suffer." But others view Morales' plan as a practical alternative to hard-line drug policies that, they say, have failed in Bolivia. On Wednesday, with 93 percent of polling places counted, Morales had 54.3 percent of the votes cast in Sunday's presidential election. His main rival in the eight-candidate race, former President Jorge Quiroga, had less than 30 percent. Morales needs more than 50 percent of the vote to become the first Bolivian to win a presidential election outright since the nation returned to democratic rule in 1982. By law, Congress decides the winner if no candidate garners a majority. Many observers point out that Morales got his start in politics as the leader of the largest union of coca growers in central Bolivia's Chapare jungle. Most of the coca crop in Chapare is illegal, though farmers in Yungas, a mountainous region near the capital of La Paz, are allowed to grow 30,000 acres for traditional consumption. High in iron and calcium, coca leaves contain, on average, 0.5 percent of the alkaloid cocaine. When chewed, the leaves provide a caffeine-like boost. In La Paz, Bolivians can buy everything from cookies, candy and tea to shampoo and prostate remedies made from the leaf. However, a 1961 U.N. treaty classifies both the narcotic and coca as dangerous substances. As a result, teas, medicines and other products made from coca leaf cannot be legally exported. Morales wants to persuade foreign governments to remove coca from the treaty and allow the export of products made from the leaf, a position pushed by past Bolivian administrations. "Coca is an Andean tradition, while cocaine is a Western habit," then-President Jaime Paz Zamora told the World Health Organization in 1992. There have been few studies on coca's health effects in recent years. But in 1994, the World Health Organization and the U.N. Interregional Crime and Justice Research Institute concluded that longtime users of coca leaf did not show the classic signs of drug addiction. "There is a lot of legitimacy in Evo's demand that global markets be opened for products of the coca plant," said Ethan Nadelmann, director of the New York-based Drug Policy Alliance and an outspoken critic of U.S. anti-narcotics policies. Doubts About Drug War A growing number of Latin American officials and scholars, he said, are voicing doubts about the drug war. "It's not as if Evo is the first person to think this," Nadelmann said. "But there's a resistance to change. ... Many people prefer the devil they know." Morales has called Washington's strategy a failure and says it makes sense to crack down on powerful cocaine mafias rather than poor coca farmers. "Our position is, zero cocaine and zero drug trafficking," he told foreign reporters. U.S. officials say they have no quarrel with Bolivians who chew coca or use the leaves for tea. The problem, they say, is that much of the coca grown here is turned into cocaine. In recent interviews, several Bolivian farmers openly admitted that some of their coca likely ends up in the hands of traffickers. Ironically, American efforts to wipe out the plant helped Morales make a name for himself. Since the 1980s, U.S.-financed brigades of machete-wielding police and army troops have tried to chop down coca plants, sparking violent protests often organized by Morales. According to his adviser, Rivera, Morales now endorses a less confrontational approach based on an experiment begun last year. To defuse an anti-eradication protest that left two people dead, then-President Carlos Mesa authorized the planting of 7,900 acres of coca in Chapare. Farm families taking part in the program may each grow a 130-square-foot plot of coca, which provides up to $80 in monthly income. In exchange, growers are to cooperate with authorities when they move in to chop down any excess coca. "Since the agreement was reached, there have been no deaths, injuries or protests" in Chapare, said analyst Juan Ramon Quintana. A 2001 study published by a U.S.-funded Bolivian think tank concluded that local consumption of coca was dropping. But Morales has insisted that the nation needs more coca to chew even though he has also said that he does not favor unlimited cultivation. "There is a huge, unsatisfied demand," Rivera said. "If there is a legitimate market for it, all of the coca in the Chapare could be legalized." Farmers Divided Should that happen, the Bush administration could declare Bolivia an uncooperative partner in the war on drugs, analysts say. So-called "decertification" could jeopardize U.S. aid programs for Bolivia, which totalled $157 million last year. Coca farmers are divided on Morales' drug proposals. Legal growers fear that a steep rise in production would provoke a freefall in prices. "It will bankrupt us," said Porfirio Diamantino, as he weighed a bag full of coca leaves on a scale in the Yungas town of Huancane. But in zones where coca is illegal, growers see Morales as a champion of their cause. "Other governments came in here with shovels and machetes and tried to destroy our crops," said Roberto Zambrana, as he stripped leaves from coca plants on a steep hillside outside the village of Las Americas. "We must give Evo a chance." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake