Pubdate: Wed, 10 Sep 1997 By Karl Penhaul BOGOTA (Reuter) Colombia's crackdown on illegal drug plantations is forcing peasants to flee their land and join the ranks of Marxist guerrillas, a U.S.based human rights group says. The independent Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA) says Colombia's U.S.backed drug eradication policy going handinhand with counterinsurgency operations and widespread violation of human rights is doing ``more harm than good.'' The police and army, which share a drug enforcement role, have long accused leftist rebels, especially the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), of drug trafficking. They also accuse the guerrillas of whipping up social unrest in the main cocagrowing regions, including last year's peasant marches in southern Colombia to protest government programs to eradicate coca leaf crops the raw material for cocaine. ``Colombia's fumigation program is ... forcing people to move deeper into the jungle to grow coca, swelling the ranks of the FARC and generating a socioeconomic crisis which only favors the FARC and marginalizes the government even more,'' WOLA researcher Coletta Youngers told Reuters in an interview. Colombia's drug crop fumigation program is the most ambitious in Latin America. Last year authorities sprayed more than 44,500 acres of coca leaf and 9,900 acres of opium poppy. THIN LINE BETWEEN DRUG FIGHT AND COUNTERINSURGENCY Many peasants in remote areas claim they have no alternative to growing coca leaf since poor infrastructure means they are unable to get traditional crops to market or sell them for a fair price. Drug traffickers make regular trips to such areas to buy the raw material for their trade. Washington has given some $80 million in counternarcotics funding to Colombia's police and army this year, together with a multimillion dollar package of equipment and material aid. ``Antidrug operations in Guaviare and other cocagrowing regions are linked to a counterinsurgency campaign characterized by continuous and serious human rights violations,'' said Youngers, who recently returned from a factfinding mission to Guaviare province. Local authorities in neighboring Caqueta, a stronghold of the FARC's Southern Bloc and one of the country's major cocagrowing regions, claim the military is using the cover of counternarcotics operations to destroy entire communities suspected of serving as guerrilla support bases. President Ernesto Samper temporarily demilitarized a huge swath of Caqueta in June to allow FARC guerrillas to free 70 troops, some of whom had been captured in a humiliating battle more than nine months earlier. Since then the army has put a stranglehold on supplies of fuel and cement, both used in the preliminary stages of cocaine manufacture, in the region. Jaime Ramirez, who sells gasoline in Cartagena del Chaira, the jungle town that briefly shot to prominence when the FARC handed over the captive troops in a public ceremony there, said the army had cut his supplies to less than one eighth of previous levels. MILITARY DEFENDS STRICT MEASURES Gen. Agustin Ardila, head of the army's Fourth Division, which operates in eastern and southern Colombia, defended the strict measures. ``We have severely restricted the traffic of cocaine and each day we're putting more troops into the area to hit at the financial base of the narcoFARC,'' he told Reuters. ``The peasants in these areas have always been under the influence of the FARC.'' Other army sources estimated the cut in fuel supplies had stemmed as much as 70 percent of the cocaine trade in the area most of which they say is controlled by the FARC. Ardila said similar restrictions had driven out drug traffickers and coca growers from Miraflores, in Guaviare, which he described as an ``international cocaine paradise.'' He said the moves had led to a drop in the population there from more than 10,000 to less than 1,200 in just a year. Victor Oime, mayor of Cartagena del Chaira, who recently traveled to Bogota to demand an end to the army restrictions, said drug traffickers were still smuggling their own supplies into Caqueta via alternative routes. But he said the measures had had a drastic effect on river transport, virtually the only way in and out of the region, and on fuel available to power electricity generators, water pumps, domestic stoves and rudimentary agricultural equipment. ``The situation in Cartagena and lower down the Caguan River is critical. The only thing the military is doing with these measures is destroying the community and (it) threatens to kill those people who fight for the social rights of the population,'' Oime told Reuters. He said that if the government did not lift the measures people may be forced to stage new mass marches similiar to the coca growers protests last year, which ended in violence and even deaths. ``Instead of just letting us fall right back into the same state of neglect they have turned us into a military objective,'' another local official, who did not wish to be named, told Reuters.