Pubdate: Wed, 29 Jul 1998 Source: Inter Press Service PRESIDENT-ELECT AIMS TO "DE-NARCOTIZE" RELATIONS BOGOTA, (IPS) - Colombian President-elect Andres Pastrana will seek to improve relations with the United States, while shifting the focus of bilateral ties away from the war on drugs, according to future Foreign Minister Guillermo Fernandez. Fernandez announced that Pastrana would meet with President Bill Clinton on Aug. 3 to discuss issues such as trade, human rights, peace policy and, of course, cooperation in anti-drug efforts. One of Pastrana's campaign pledges was to "de-narcotize" relations with the United States and orient his foreign policy along the lines of defense of national interests. "Our relations with the United States should be harmonious and of mutual respect," which "has not been easy," said Fernandez, alluding to the deterioration bilateral ties have suffered under the government of President Ernesto Samper, whose campaign coffers were allegedly swollen with drug money. Under Samper, Colombia received a negative mark from Washington as an ally in the war on drugs for three years in a row, and in 1996 the Clinton administration canceled Samper's entry visa to the United States. Designated Foreign Minister Fernandez said yesterday that Clinton's invitation of Pastrana was a signal that Washington was interested in healing bilateral relations. Unlike Samper, who from the very start of his term felt the weight of U.S. censure, Pastrana received a message from the Washington after his late June victory in the polls, in which Clinton expressed his hope to establish very close cooperation with Colombia's new government. But Pastrana faces several big hurdles that will make it difficult to "de-narcotize" relations, said Luis Valencia, an expert in international relations with the private University of los Andes. Valencia told IPS that the United States sees producer countries as mainly responsible for the fight against drugs, "and Pastrana will have to move in that terrain." The analyst said that while Pastrana was heading to Washington in search of support for Colombia's budding peace process and cooperation to help strengthen the economy, the only response he may receive is more talk of the war on drugs. Coletta Youngers with the Washington Office on Latin America, a human rights group, told a local daily in Bogota that views in the United States on relations with Colombia were divided, even within the government. To the question of drug trafficking is added Colombia's poor human rights record, which Washington blames on the Samper administration, due to either action or failure to act. The key issue on the State Department's agenda for Pastrana's visit is the restoration of extradition with retroactivity, which would allow the heads of the powerful Cali cartel to be tried in U.S. courts. Last year the Colombian Congress approved extradition, but because of the lack of a clause on retroactivity, it has been impossible for the government to extradite kingpins of the Cali cartel, Miguel and Gilberto Rodriguez Orejuela, to the United States. The United States wants Colombia's new government to strictly enforce the law of seizure of illicitly obtained assets, fight money laundering, stiffen sentences for drug-related crimes, reinforce security in prisons housing drug barons, and step up the destruction of illegal crops. But in order to boost the eradication of coca and other crops, the Pastrana administration will have to effectively extend its initial overtures to the guerrillas into a full-fledged peace process. U.S. officials stress that the dismantling of all armed factions -- guerrillas as well as right-wing paramilitary groups -- is essential to fomenting cooperation in anti-drug efforts and commerce. - --- Checked-by: Melodi Cornett