Sunday, 10 March, 2002
Cocaine
Production Falls in Colombia
Rhoda
Metcalfe
Bogota
4
Mar 2002 06:46 UTC

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New police statistics
in Colombia show cocaine production in fell for the first time last
year. But a new U.S. government report says Colombia's voluntary
eradication program for small farmers is doomed to failure.
The soft arm of
Colombia's drug eradication program took a hard knock this week, when
the investigative arm of the U-S Congress released a report arguing
that alternative crop development in Colombia is doomed to failure.
The General
Accounting Office report observed that anti-drug programs in Peru and
Bolivia -- projects that offer farmers incentives to switch from
illicit crops to legal ones -- have only worked where the government
had tight control over the regions where drug crops were grown.
But in Colombia, most
of these regions are under the control of left-wing rebels or
right-wing paramilitaries. Therefore, the report concluded, the $100
million the United States is investing in these Colombian projects has
little hope of success.
In response, the head
of Colombia's alternative development agency, PLANTE, came out
swinging. "How can they judge a program that has not had even one
year of operation," argues agency director Maria Inez Restrepo. "The
United States helped Peru and Bolivia for almost 20 years," she
says. "We just received our first U.S. aid last October."
She says much of the
U.S. aid is going to Puumayo -- a region in southern Colombia where an
estimated 25-percent of the world's coca leaf -- the raw material for
cocaine -- is grown. Ms. Restrepo pointed out that since last July,
30,000 farmers in Putumayo have signed agreements promising to abandon
coca in exchange for food and help developing new crops.
She says most of
these farmers got into coca out of desperation, and deserve more time
to help them find other crops. "It is difficult to work in these
regions, but it is possible she says, and we are doing it," says
Mr. Restrepo. The director also says the guerrillas have never killed
or taken hostage any of her agency's employees because they have the
trust of rural farmers.
Despite the U.S.
criticism of the eradication program, there is some indication
anti-drug efforts are working.
Colombia's Justice
Minister Romulo Gonzalez released new figures this week showing that
the area of coca cultivation in Colombia fell last year -- by close to
17-percent. Although most of that success was due to forced
eradication -- crops destroyed by aerial spraying -- officials at
PLANTE believe by next July, their voluntary eradication projects will
also begin to bear fruit.
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