Pubdate: Sunday, July 18, 1999 Source: San Francisco Examiner (CA) Copyright: 1999 San Francisco Examiner Contact: http://www.examiner.com/ Forum: http://examiner.com/cgi-bin/WebX Author: Larry Rohter Note: Our newshawk and editor of the DrugSense Weekly news/comments section writes: "This is a tragic example of how our drug war has turned entire nations into basket cases through the creation of powerful criminal economies and simultaneously making "honest government" a forlorn hope." PROSPECTS DIM FOR COIOMBIA PEACE PUSH Violence Could Mar Talks To End 35 Years Of Conflict BOGOTA, Colombia - Almost every day, it seems, there is some piece of bad news to lower spirits and raise fears here. If it isn't one guerrilla group attacking on the outskirts of the capital, it is another hijacking a plane or blowing up the country's main oil pipeline. If it isn't unemployment rising to an all-time high, it is the peso plunging to a record low against the dollar. On Monday, the government of President Andres Pastrana and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, the Marxist guerrilla group known to Colombians as FARC, are scheduled to begin formal peace negotiations aimed at ending 35 years of civil conflict. But a rapidly deteriorating political and economic situation has weakened Pastrana's hand going into the talks, undermining prospects for peace and emboldening the rebels. Thanks to huge profits from the drug trade and kidnappings, the country's two main guerrilla groups, as well as the right-wing paramilitary death squads that combat them, are better armed than ever, and control nearly half the territory of a country larger than Texas. A rebel offensive the week before last, launched from a Switzerd-sized demilitarized zone that Pastrana, handed over to the Revoutionary Armed Forces last November as a gesture of good faith, forced the government to impose a limited curfew in 10 of Colombia's 32 provinces. Guerrillas Running Country? "It's the guerrillas who have taken the reins and are running the country, not the government," complained Ana de Alvarez, a 65-year-old widow living on a pension. "The president is a Boy Scout, too much a nice guy for his own good and ours. I hate to say this, because I voted for him and am a staunch Conservative, but we need someone with a firm hand to impose order and put an end to this horrible insecurity." In Bogota, home to 7 million of the country's nearly 40 million people, residents are especially shaken by last weekend's offensive by the rebels, which demonstrated that the group has the ability to strike, if only briefly, uncomfortably close to the city. Though FARC controls much of southeastern Colombia, that area is sparsely populated, and the group has traditionally avoided campaigns against urban areas. "On top of everything else, now we have to live with the constant few that those bandits can invade* at any moment," said Jesus Rojas, a jeweler. "We have lost the tranquillity that we had before as residents of Bogota." After sounding the alarm about rebel gains, the armed forces reversed course, with Gen. Fernando Tapias, the commander in chief, boasting that his troops inflicted a "resounding defeat" on the rebels, who, he said, lost nearly 300 fighters. But the popular impression is still that momentum remains with the guerrillas, who have enjoyed a string of military successes over the last four years. "It's like a soccer game in which you are losing 4 to 0," said Alfredo Rangel Suarez, a former government national security advisor. "You may score a goal late in the second half, but that doesn't mean that the game is tied." New, Economic Crises In the past, even when the battles against guerrillas and cocaine cartels were going badly, Colombians could brag about an economic performance remarkable by Latin American standards. Through the 1980s and into the 1990s, as countries like Brazil and Mexico struggled with debt negotiations and austerity, the economy here was growing at an average of 4.5 percent a year. But Colombia is now experiencing what officials describe as its most severe economic crisis in 70 years, a result of low prices for exports, high domestic interest rates and drastic budgets cuts. Figures announced last week show that the economy contracted by nearly 6 percent in the first quarter of 1999, the largest decline in history, and that unemployment has risen to just under 20 percent, another unenviable record. Since taking office, Pastrana has twice had to devalue the peso. But the Colombian currency continues to slide, reaching a record low of 1,925 to the dollar on Monday, down more than 36 percent in the last year, in large part because of market nervousness about guerrilla advances. What is worse, the economy does not yet appear to have hit bottom, and political uncertainty is keeping away the foreign investment that might help ease the crisis. "Very difficult days lie ahead in which. it will be necessary to act with realism and without fantasies," Minister of Finance Juan Camilo Restrepo warned on Thursday when he announced that Colombia had begun negotiating a $3 billion credit from the International Monetary Fund. A U.S. official with long experience here said, "There an no jobs anywhere for people with skills and education, and so now you're seeing people, not just capital, trying to leave the country. Every sector of the Colombian economy is suffering, but analysts are most concerned with the decline of agriculture, weakened by an earthquake in the heart of the coffee-growing zone in January and low prices for crops. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake