Pubdate: 9 April 1999 Source: Daily Telegraph (UK) Copyright: of Telegraph Group Limited 1999 Contact: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Author: Polly Newton, Political Staff BANANA PRODUCERS 'COULD TURN TO THE DRUGS TRADE' BANANA growers in the Caribbean could switch to marijuana production after losing preferential treatment from the European Union, it was claimed yesterday. The claim was made by Walter Francois, St Lucia's minister of commerce, after the World Trade Organisation upheld a complaint by America. The United States objected to the imposition of higher tariffs on bananas imported to Europe from Latin America than on those from former colonies of EU states. Mr Francois said the effects of the decision would be "devastating". The governments of the Windward Islands, of which St Lucia is one, had begun a programme of economic diversification, but the banana industry remained very important. "We cannot compete with the very cheap labour costs used by the Latin American producers to give them such power," he said. "There is the distinct possibility that some people will swap to the illegal activity of growing drugs such as marijuana." Hubert Hughes, the chief minister of Anguilla, accused America of supporting "slave labour". "Producers in Latin America are paying a pittance to their workers," he said. He feared that the ruling would force people from the worst affected islands to seek work in places such as Anguilla, where there were more jobs - but not enough to absorb the unemployed from across the region. The World Trade Organisation decision, which may be subject to an appeal by the EU, has cleared the way for the United States to impose punitive tariffs totalling UKP120 million against imports from Europe as compensation for lost banana exports by American-owned companies. The amount is less than half of that originally demanded by America, but it is still expected to have a significant effect on certain British industries, including cashmere production, which is concentrated in the Borders. - --- MAP posted-by: Rich O'Grady