Source: Los Angeles Times (CA) Contact: 213-237-4712 Pubdate: Sun, 1 Mar 1998 Author: Juanita Darling, Times Staff Writer POLITICS -- AND DRUG BUSINESS -- AS USUAL IN COLOMBIA Investigation yields arrests but not change. Current prosecutor insists he is getting results. BOGOTA, Colombia--The lukewarm U.S. endorsement of Colombia's drug-fighting efforts, announced Thursday, is another sign that neither international shame nor domestic angst can change an entrenched political system tainted by narcotics money, skeptics said. After two years of being classified as a pariah in the war against drugs--along with Iran and Myanmar (formerly Burma)--Colombia was categorized by the U.S. administration last week as not fully cooperating but too important in the anti-narcotics effort to be penalized. That is exactly the status this country had three years ago, leaving many Colombians feeling that, after years of internationally embarrassing squabbling with the United States, they are back where they started. In fact, that is also the general feeling here about efforts to purge a political system that most observers agree has been severely compromised by drug money. An ongoing, highly publicized investigation into corruption has put a dozen members of Congress and several high-ranking government officials in jail for accepting drug money. But how much has really changed? President Ernesto Samper--elected with the help of $6 million in drug money, according to his own aides--is going to finish his four-year term this summer. His handpicked successor, also implicated in the corruption scandal, is the leading candidate to replace him. Many of the politicians jailed in the drug-money scandal have already finished their sentences. And Colombia is still the world's leading cocaine producer. In fact, cocaine production is up 18% compared with 1996, according to a report released last week by the U.S. State Department. Colombia is also gaining market share in heroin production. "The results [of the investigation] have been minimal," said Maria Isabel Rueda, a columnist for the Semana newsmagazine and a candidate for Colombia's Congress in elections next Sunday. "Money from drug traffickers is still financing campaigns. . . . Corruption is worse than ever." In addition, many observers believe that those who investigated and publicized the narco-politics scandals are being punished. The army colonel who found the documents that served as the basis for the investigation has been fired, along with two prosecutors on the case. The newscasts that most aggressively followed the developments have lost their government broadcasting licenses. * * * The most acrimonious debate now is over how aggressively the current prosecutor general is continuing the investigation. "There is a dynamic that cannot be stopped," said Adolfo Salamanca, former deputy prosecutor general and a candidate for Congress. "But the government's intention is to halt" the investigation. Samper had a perfect opportunity to stop the investigation when Alfonso Valdivieso, Salamanca's old boss, resigned last year to run for president. "By abandoning his work, Valdivieso caused the country tremendous harm," Salamanca said. But Enrique Santos Calderon, an influential columnist with El Tiempo newspaper, said that, while Samper might have wanted to thwart the investigation, he picked the wrong man to replace Valdivieso: Alfonso Gomez Mendez, a former Bogota district attorney and ex-ambassador to Austria. Gomez Mendez "is a very proud man," Santos Calderon said. When critics alleged that Gomez Mendez was being made prosecutor general as a dupe, he decided to prove them wrong, Santos Calderon said. Indeed, sitting in his office inside the $50-million, modern fortress where Colombia's top prosecutors work, Gomez Mendez said he has tripled the number of investigators and support staff assigned to the case. "The investigation is expanding," he said. "We have done more in seven months than they did in three years." Prosecutors last week arrested Comptroller General David Turbay for allegedly accepting money from the Cali drug cartel. Prosecutors based the arrest on the same evidence that Valdivieso and Salamanca had a year ago when they decided to shut down the investigation against Turbay, Gomez Mendez said. Valdivieso agreed that his successor has expanded the investigation, but Salamanca insisted that the few high-profile arrests are a smoke screen to hide all the cases being closed without arrests. But observers insist that the real impact of the political scandal that has strained relations with the United States will not be measured in arrests but at the polls, when Congress is elected next week and a new president is chosen in May. Copyright Los Angeles Times