News (Media Awareness Project) - Colombia: U.S. Starts Mass Fumigation Of Colombian Coca Farms |
Title: | Colombia: U.S. Starts Mass Fumigation Of Colombian Coca Farms |
Published On: | 2002-09-04 |
Source: | San Francisco Chronicle (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-29 19:13:48 |
U.S. STARTS MASS FUMIGATION OF COLOMBIAN COCA FARMS
President Uribe Fully Cooperative
Rosal, Colombia -- With the full support of the new Colombian president,
the United States has begun what officials say will be the biggest and most
aggressive effort yet to wipe out coca growing.
A round of aerial spraying to kill Colombia's mammoth drug crops, which
resumed here a month ago, is part of a new phase in the war on drugs. U.S.
officials said that it was bigger and more aggressive than before and that
if sustained, it could at last make substantial inroads against Colombia's
coca growing.
With the approval of Colombian President Alvaro Uribe, the U.S. plan calls
for more crop dusters operating more hours and with none of the
restrictions that officials say hampered spraying programs in the past.
Here in the Guamuez Valley, the world's richest coca-producing region, the
effects are clear. The crop dusters have returned, flying low and leaving a
fine mist of gray spray in Colombia's coca-growing heartland. Fields of
brown, withering coca bushes, whose leaves are used to make cocaine, remain
in their wake.
"Look at all this -- it was all fumigated," groused one farmer, Diomar
Montenegro, 49, as he stood in a field of wilting coca bushes in the
southern Colombia hamlet of Rosal. "I cannot do this anymore. They have put
me out in the street."
It is a refrain that U.S. officials are happy to hear. In the last
large-scale spraying of this region, a two-month onslaught that ended in
February 2001, the United States said it would concentrate on
"industrial-size" plots.
U.S. and Colombian officials pledged that small farmers would be spared as
long as they agreed to stop growing coca voluntarily in exchange for modest
government benefits. But in reality, many small farms were sprayed.
Uribe is allowing U.S. officials to plan missions wherever and whenever
they see fit, and there is no pretext that small farmers will not be hit.
U.S. planners say they intend to cover as much acreage with defoliant as
possible to stop the replanting of coca.
The goal, U.S. officials say, is to kill up to 300,000 acres of coca this
year, 30 percent more than was sprayed last year. With more crop dusters
arriving -- U.S. officials say the fleet will increase from 12 to 22 by
next spring -- the State Department hopes to double the acreage sprayed
next year, killing so much coca that replanting cannot keep up.
Despite the rosy predictions, drug policy analysts and some lawmakers in
Washington warn that the intensified program could just cause coca planting
to spread to a wider area.
"Fumigation has an effect, but we would argue it's an effect of
displacement," said Klaus Nyholm, who oversees the U.N. Drug Control
Program's office in Colombia. "The next question is where will the coca go
from here?"
Although the United States has spent $1.7 billion since 1999 in Colombia to
stamp out drugs, the amount of coca in Colombia has increased 25 percent
from 2000 to 2001, according to U.S. estimates based on images from
satellites and projections by analysts.
"After nearly $2 billion, our policy in Colombia has accomplished little,"
said Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., who has criticized U.S. policy toward
Colombia and who heads the Senate Appropriations Committee's foreign
operations subcommittee.
President Uribe Fully Cooperative
Rosal, Colombia -- With the full support of the new Colombian president,
the United States has begun what officials say will be the biggest and most
aggressive effort yet to wipe out coca growing.
A round of aerial spraying to kill Colombia's mammoth drug crops, which
resumed here a month ago, is part of a new phase in the war on drugs. U.S.
officials said that it was bigger and more aggressive than before and that
if sustained, it could at last make substantial inroads against Colombia's
coca growing.
With the approval of Colombian President Alvaro Uribe, the U.S. plan calls
for more crop dusters operating more hours and with none of the
restrictions that officials say hampered spraying programs in the past.
Here in the Guamuez Valley, the world's richest coca-producing region, the
effects are clear. The crop dusters have returned, flying low and leaving a
fine mist of gray spray in Colombia's coca-growing heartland. Fields of
brown, withering coca bushes, whose leaves are used to make cocaine, remain
in their wake.
"Look at all this -- it was all fumigated," groused one farmer, Diomar
Montenegro, 49, as he stood in a field of wilting coca bushes in the
southern Colombia hamlet of Rosal. "I cannot do this anymore. They have put
me out in the street."
It is a refrain that U.S. officials are happy to hear. In the last
large-scale spraying of this region, a two-month onslaught that ended in
February 2001, the United States said it would concentrate on
"industrial-size" plots.
U.S. and Colombian officials pledged that small farmers would be spared as
long as they agreed to stop growing coca voluntarily in exchange for modest
government benefits. But in reality, many small farms were sprayed.
Uribe is allowing U.S. officials to plan missions wherever and whenever
they see fit, and there is no pretext that small farmers will not be hit.
U.S. planners say they intend to cover as much acreage with defoliant as
possible to stop the replanting of coca.
The goal, U.S. officials say, is to kill up to 300,000 acres of coca this
year, 30 percent more than was sprayed last year. With more crop dusters
arriving -- U.S. officials say the fleet will increase from 12 to 22 by
next spring -- the State Department hopes to double the acreage sprayed
next year, killing so much coca that replanting cannot keep up.
Despite the rosy predictions, drug policy analysts and some lawmakers in
Washington warn that the intensified program could just cause coca planting
to spread to a wider area.
"Fumigation has an effect, but we would argue it's an effect of
displacement," said Klaus Nyholm, who oversees the U.N. Drug Control
Program's office in Colombia. "The next question is where will the coca go
from here?"
Although the United States has spent $1.7 billion since 1999 in Colombia to
stamp out drugs, the amount of coca in Colombia has increased 25 percent
from 2000 to 2001, according to U.S. estimates based on images from
satellites and projections by analysts.
"After nearly $2 billion, our policy in Colombia has accomplished little,"
said Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., who has criticized U.S. policy toward
Colombia and who heads the Senate Appropriations Committee's foreign
operations subcommittee.
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