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News (Media Awareness Project) - Colombia: US Program Failing To Halt Drug Crops, Report Charges
Title:Colombia: US Program Failing To Halt Drug Crops, Report Charges
Published On:2002-02-27
Source:St. Petersburg Times (FL)
Fetched On:2008-08-31 01:48:29
U.S. PROGRAM FAILING TO HALT DRUG CROPS, REPORT CHARGES

WASHINGTON -- The U.S.-backed drug war in Colombia is looking bleak, partly
because officials are having trouble getting impoverished farmers to stop
planting illegal crops in territory controlled by Marxist rebels, a
government report says.

As a result, Congress should stop future funding for alternative
development programs in Colombia until U.S. officials can show that they're
working, says the report by the General Accounting Office, or GAO, the
investigative arm of Congress.

Last year, Congress asked the GAO to examine previous alternative
development programs in Bolivia and Peru to see what lessons, if any, they
held for Colombia. Released Monday, the 51-page report seemed to offer its
conclusion in the title: "Drug Control: Efforts to Develop Alternatives to
Cultivating Illicit Crops in Colombia Have Made Little Progress and Face
Serious Obstacles."

The report said Colombia's first hurdle is that the rebels, and not the
government, control large swaths of territory in the south where the bulk
of the coca is grown. According to the report, the poor quality of the soil
and infrastructure are further obstacles.

Under Plan Colombia, a $7.5-billion internationally funded aid package to
help bring peace to the war-ravaged country, the idea for alternative
development is to wean farmers away from coca and poppy, used in the
manufacture of cocaine and heroin, respectively. Under the $1.3-billion
U.S. contribution to Plan Colombia, mostly for the purchase of military
hardware, the United States Agency for International Development, USAID, is
implementing $52.5-million in programs for alternative development.

As of Sept. 30, 2001, however, USAID had spent only $5.6-million. The
agriculture projects are expected to begin in earnest this year.

"USAID faces serious obstacles to achieving progress in Colombia, and the
experiences in Bolivia and Peru strongly suggest that alternative
development in Colombia will not succeed unless the obstacles are
overcome," the report said. "Among them, the Colombian government does not
control many coca-growing areas, it has limited capacity to carry out
sustained interdiction operations, and its ability to effectively
coordinate eradication and alternative development activities remains
uncertain."

The GAO recommended that the USAID administrator update its plans in
Colombia "to take into account extreme difficulty in gaining access to the
coca-growing regions."

"We also suggest that the Congress consider requiring that USAID
demonstrate measurable progress in its current efforts to reduce coca
cultivation in Colombia before any additional funding is provided for
alternative development."

USAID officials were not immediately available for comment. A letter
included in the report from John Marshall, assistant administrator in the
Bureau for Management at USAID, however, defended the program.

"As we learned over many years in Bolivia and Peru, success depends on
determination, long-term commitment and the ability to learn and adjust to
changing circumstances," Marshall said.

He noted that in Colombia USAID covers three broad areas: strengthening
democratic institutions and human rights protection, providing temporary
assistance to Colombian citizens who have been displaced by conflict and
working with farmers to develop alternatives to coca and poppy cultivation.

U.S. counterdrug policy in Colombia has come under harsh criticism both
here and abroad, largely because of the large military component under Plan
Colombia. Critics have charged Washington with becoming embroiled in a
rebel war. Environmentalists say that a U.S.-funded aerial spraying program
in Colombia has proved harmful to people.

In recent days, the situation in Colombia has deteriorated.

Peace talks between the rebels and the administration of President Andres
Pastrana have crumbled, prompting the Colombian military to force the
rebels out of a demilitarized zone and helping to intensify the war.

Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, was one of three senators who requested the
GAO investigation.

"Alternative development is and will remain an important component of U.S.
assistance to Colombia," he said.

"But it's important that we're sure the funnel we are pouring this
assistance through is pointed in the right direction and can handle the
amount we're pouring into it. Otherwise," he said, "we're going to have a mess."
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