Pubdate: 25 Jan 1999 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 1999 The Miami Herald Website: http://www.herald.com/ Forum: http://krwebx.infi.net/webxmulti/cgi-bin/WebX?mherald Contact: Lucien O. Chauvin, The Miami Herald DRUG ERADICATION EFFORT WORSENS POVERTY AMONG BOLIVIAN FARMERS Standing in the pouring rain looking at his devastated fields, Jacinto Sanchez could not hide his tears. "There is nothing, not a single plant. They razed everything," said Sanchez, a peasant farmer in Bolivia's Chapare region. The raid on Sanchez's farm last month was not led by bandits, but by a brigade of nearly 500 Bolivian soldiers. Sanchez lost yucca, rice and pineapple crops, as well as what the soldiers were looking for -- coca. Sanchez is a casualty of the Bolivian government's five-year "Dignity Plan," which aims to eradicate coca, from whose leaves cocaine is extracted. One year into the plan, government troops have eradicated more than 4,000 acres of coca plants. The 6,000 soldiers in the Chapare, in the Bolivia jungle region between the departments of Cochabamba and Santa Cruz, will remain until all coca plants are gone, President Hugo Banzer said. "No government before mine tried to get Bolivia out of the drug trafficking circuit or eradicate all excess coca. We lived a big lie for many years. The government paid about $1,000 for each acre of coca eradicated, but for each acre they eradicated the coca growers just planted another one deeper into the jungle. By 2002 there will be no excessive coca grown in Bolivia," Banzer said in an interview with The Herald. In Bolivia, like in neighboring Peru, areas are designated for the legal production of coca, which is also used in tea and chewed by peasants living at high altitudes as a remedy for altitude sickness and hunger. The legal area in Bolivia is in the Yungas, north of La Paz. For peasant farmers like Sanchez, coca is not about drugs, but about economics. Rolando Vargas, a coca-growers' leader in Sinahota, where Sanchez's farm is located, says that the forced eradication will push the nearly 5,000 families dependent on coca in the Chapare further into poverty. The average yearly income in the area is below Bolivia's national per capita income, which is $900. "Instead of fighting against poverty, this so-called `Dignity Plan' is making poverty worse. ... Our only crime is being poor, and because of our poverty we defend our right to grow coca," Vargas said. Since the 1980s, the U.S. government, European Community governments and a host of multilateral agencies have invested well over $1 billion in trying to find alternatives to coca. Positive results, however, have been elusive. Since 1993, the U.S. government has invested more than $280 million in Bolivia in anti-narcotic and alternative development programs, with nearly $100 million of this money earmarked for the Chapare. Alternative crops as a replacement for coca range from macadamia nuts to coffee to the pineapples Sanchez lost in the recent eradication raid, but none has come close to offering the profits made from coca leaves. In early November, a 100-pound bag of coca leaves brought farmers roughly $40, while a box of 10 pineapples sold for 50 cents. While coca represents 12,000 acres in the Chapare, it continues to bring farmers more money than the 45,000 acres of alternative crops that have been planted since the mid-1980s. Several new products, however, may finally break the Chapare's coca-dominated economy. The production of palm hearts, black pepper and bananas for export is increasing and promises to bring farmers income they never received from other alternative crops. By 2000, farmers in the Chapare will be producing 190 tons of bananas, 5.3 tons of palm hearts and 120 tons of black pepper, according to U.S. government estimates. Cocoa may also be a possible crop next year. Vargas says that while farmers are interested in these new crops, they worry that over time the market will become saturated, which is what happened when pineapples were introduced to the area. "We don't need a five-year plan, like the government proposes, but a long-term strategy to eradicate poverty. Poverty, not coca, is the enemy," he says. - --- MAP posted-by: Rich O'Grady