Pubdate: Wed, 21 Dec 2005 Source: Indianapolis Star (IN) Website: http://www.starnews.com/ Feedback: http://www.indystar.com/help/contact/letters.html Address: P.O. Box 145, Indianapolis, IN 46206 Copyright: 2006 Indianapolis Newspapers Inc. Author: Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) BOLIVIA'S PRESIDENT-TO-BE MAPS COCA PLAN LA PAZ, Bolivia -- Bolivia's soon-to-be president, Evo Morales, a coca farmer under pressure to crack down on cocaine, pledged Tuesday to keep controls on coca but said he will study expanding the area where it can be legally grown. Morales also called on the United States to work with him to develop better ways of ending drug trafficking while preserving the traditional market for coca in his Andean nation, where people have chewed the plant to stave off hunger and used it as a medicine for thousands of years. "There won't be free cultivation of the coca leaf," said Morales, who still has his own coca plot and came to prominence leading fellow growers -- "cocaleros" -- in fighting U.S.-backed efforts to eradicate coca in Bolivia, the No. 3 supplier of cocaine to the United States after Colombia and Peru. Morales' apparently wide victory margin in Sunday's election virtually assures that Congress will declare him president in January, even if he falls shy of the majority needed to win outright in the eight-man race. And a majority win appears increasingly likely, since Morales already had slightly more than 50 percent Tuesday with half the vote -- including much of his rural support -- still uncounted, according to official results. His opponents have conceded. The U.S.-led war on drugs inadvertently helped bring Morales, a leftist Aymara Indian, to power. The battle against coca eradication that he led helped mobilize Indian organizations angered by poverty and political domination by a rich elite. Indians are a majority in Bolivia, but never has the nation had an Indian president. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman