Pubdate: Sun, 30 Dec 2012 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2012 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division, Hearst Newspaper Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198 NEW YORK TIMES EXPERIMENT YIELDS FEWER COCA CROPS TODOS SANTOS, Bolivia- There is nothing clandestine about Julian Rojas' coca plot, which is tucked deep within acres of banana groves. It has been mapped with satellite imagery, cataloged in a government database, cross-referenced with his personal information, and checked and rechecked by the local coca growers' union. The same goes for the plots worked by Rojas' neighbors and thousands of other farmers in this torrid region east of the Andes who are licensed by the Bolivian government to grow coca, the plant used to make cocaine. President EvoMorales, who first came to prominence as a leader of coca growers, kicked out the Drug Enforcement Administration in 2009. That ouster, together with events such as the arrest last year of the former head of the Bolivian anti-narcotics police on trafficking charges, led Washington to conclude that Bolivia was not meeting its international obligations to fight narcotics. But despite the rift with the United States, Bolivia, the world's third-largest cocaine producer, has advanced its own unorthodox approach toward controlling the growing of coca, which veers markedly from the wider war on drugs and includes high-tech monitoring of thousands of legal coca patches intended to produce coca leaf for traditional uses. Worrisome signs To the surprise of many, this experiment has led to a significant drop in coca plantings inMorales' Bolivia, an accomplishment that has largely occurred without themurders and other violence that have become the bloody byproduct of American-led measures to control trafficking in Colombia, Mexico and other parts of the region. Yet there also are worrisome signs that such gains are being undercut as traffickers use more efficientmethods to produce cocaine and outmaneuver Bolivian law enforcement to keep drugs flowing out of the country. In one key sign of progress in Bolivia's approach toward coca, the total acres planted with coca dropped 12 percent to 13 percent last year, according to separate reports by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime and theWhite House Office of National Drug Control Policy. At the same time, the Bolivian government stepped up efforts to rip out unauthorized coca plantings and reported an increase in seizures of cocaine and cocaine base. "It's fascinating to look at a country that kicked out the United States ambassador and the DEA, and the expectation on the part of the United States is that drug war efforts would fall apart," said Kathryn Ledebur, director of the Andean Information Network, a Bolivian research group. Instead, she said, Bolivia is "showing results." Registered growers Still, there is skepticism. "Our perspective is they've made real advances, and they're a long way from where we'd like to see them," said Larry Memmott, charge d'affaires of the U. S. Embassy in La Paz. "In terms of law enforcement, a lot remains to be done." Although Bolivia outlaws cocaine, it permits the growing of coca for traditional uses. Bolivians chew coca leaf as a mild stimulant and use it as amedicine, a tea and, particularly among the indigenous population, in religious rituals. The registration of thousands of growers, completed this year, is part of an enforcement system that relies on growers to police one another. If registered growers are found to have plantings above the maximum allowed, soldiers are called in to remove the excess. If growers violate the limit a second time, their entire crop is cut down and they lose the right to grow coca. Growers' unions can also be punished if there are multiple violations among their members. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D