Pubdate: Mon, 08 Jun 1998 Source: Inter Press Service HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES TARNISH PERU'S ACCOMPLISHMENTS LIMA, (June 8) IPS - Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori can boast of his government's accomplishments at the special U.N. General Assembly session on the problem of drugs which opened today in New York. But according to critics, that success has come at a high price for human rights. In the past five years, the area used for coca in Peru has been slashed by more than 65 percent -- a victory attributed mainly to effective air surveillance against trafficking of cocaine paste from Peru's jungles. The government has also made inroads against the illegal flow of chemical precursors from the coast to the tropical valleys of eastern Peru, where coca is grown and processed into basic cocaine paste. Last year, the police seized 268 tons of 18 chemicals used to produce basic cocaine paste, smuggled in small loads to the jungle by road. "Producing coca in the Peruvian jungle is not the good business it was a few years ago," said Raul Serrano, with the non-governmental anti-drug organization Cedro. "The prices of coca leaves and basic paste have fallen, because the repression makes smuggling the drugs to Colombia more expensive and more difficult." The expert added that "Although the government budget falls short, the situation is favorable to programs for replacing coca with profitable alternative crops." But Fujimori has faced heavy criticism for Peru's poor human rights record, which critics link to excesses in drug enforcement efforts. The New York-based Lindesmith Center says international drug enforcement aid reinforces abusive police and military forces in the Andean region and Mexico. "International drug enforcement policies stimulate armies to meddle in law enforcement and undermine Latin America's efforts to promote human rights, democracy and regional security," says a report by the research center. "In the name of the war on drugs in Peru and Colombia, the United States and other governments provide assistance to the military and intelligence services considered the worst human rights violators in the hemisphere," the report adds. Fujimori is one of the 14 Latin American presidents attending this week's three day drug summit in New York, along with U.S. President Bill Clinton and heads of state and government from all over the world. The controversy over the supposed link between international anti-drug assistance and Peru's intelligence services -- caught up in an on-going scandal -- blew up after a late April visit to Lima by Barry McCaffrey, the director of the White House Office on National Drug Control Policy. On his return to Washington, McCaffrey felt obliged to call a press conference to express the discomfort he felt due to the presence of Vladimiro Montesinos, the controversial head of Peru's National Intelligence Service, in meetings he attended. But McCaffrey congratulated the Fujimori administration for its victories against the drug trade -- a tacit comparison to the meager results achieved in Bolivia, Colombia and Mexico. Due to the success of Peru's crackdown on the production of basic cocaine paste, the international drug supply pattern has shifted. Peru and Bolivia were once "source' countries -- producers of basic cocaine paste -- while Mexico and Colombia were merely "bridges" over which drugs flowed to the United States and Europe. Drug enforcement efforts in the rest of the region's producer countries have clearly not met with the same success as in Peru, because the offer of cocaine on the world market has increased and coca production has risen 12 percent in spite of the drop in Peru. Especially serious is the situation in Colombia, which in spite of some $1 billion in aid from Washington has seen a 260 percent rise in production of drugs over the past decade. Surveillance of Peru's air space to detect and intercept the small airplanes used by traffickers to carry one or two tons of basic cocaine paste per flight forced the cartels to seek new routes. The new target of anti-drug efforts, Montesinos told McCaffrey, is river transport. But trafficking drugs by river is slower and riskier and thus more expensive than small airplanes, and only small quantities can be smuggled, taking advantage of public transport systems. A source from Peru's anti-drug office reported that 11 U.S. Coast Guard and Marine instructors were training Peruvian navy and police personnel in the Santa Clotilde base on the Amazon river to optimize mechanisms of river interdiction. - --- Checked-by: Melodi Cornett