Pubdate: Fri, 06 Aug 1999 Source: Associated Press Copyright: 1999 Associated Press Author: Margarita Martinez, Associated Press Writer UNITED NATIONS - LEFTIST REBELS COOPERATING TO REDUCE DRUG CROPS BOGOTA, Colombia - Leftist rebels who make millions of dollars off the cocaine trade are cooperating with a $6 million U.N. project to wean peasants off illegal drug crops, a U.N. anti-narcotics official said. The announcement on Thursday contrasted with recent visits by U.S. officials, who revealed plans to beef up Colombia's military in hopes of forcibly eradicating illegal plantations in guerrilla-held regions. "The idea is to give more carrot, and not just the stick," Klaus Nyholm, director of the Colombia office of the U.N. Drug Control Program, said at a news conference. Colombia is the world's No. 1 source of cocaine, and its production of coca -- the plant used to make it -- has doubled since 1996. Gen. Charles Wilhelm, the top U.S. military commander in Latin America, on Wednesday toured a southern town where U.S. assistance is improving Colombia's capacity to attack drug traffickers and rebels on rivers. White House drug czar Gen. Barry McCaffrey visited a week ago, plugging a nearly $1 billion increase in U.S. anti-narcotics aid for the Andes, much of it for Colombia's police and military. Next Tuesday, the highest level U.S. diplomatic mission to visit Colombia in years will call on President Andres Pastrana to ask about his strategy for dealing with the leftist insurgency and a faltering war on drugs. Leading the mission will be Undersecretary of State Thomas Pickering, a former ambassador to El Salvador. While welcoming increased U.S. military aid, the Colombian president has urged a shift in anti-narcotics policy toward crop substitution, also known as "alternative development." Nyholm said the U.N. crop substitution project began a month ago inside a southern region controlled by the rebel Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC. Since Pastrana pulled out all troops and soldiers from the region last year in order to spur peace talks, military officials say the area has become a haven for drug traffickers. Nyholm claimed "drug cultivation has not increased or decreased since the FARC took control." The rebel group admits that it finances its 35-year insurgency in part by taxing the illegal plantations. The U.N. program will provide credits or seeds to about 5,000 local farmers who subsist off illegal plots of coca and will include road-paving projects to improve the peasants' access to distant markets, Nyholm said. Poor farmers will be encouraged to graze cattle, or plant rubber trees or bananas under the project financed by the United Nations and the Colombian government. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea