News (Media Awareness Project) - CN MB: Column: The Help Colombia Needs |
Title: | CN MB: Column: The Help Colombia Needs |
Published On: | 2000-04-12 |
Source: | Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-04 22:00:59 |
THE HELP COLOMBIA NEEDS
BOGOTA, Colombia -- I had a chat in Bogota the other day with a group of
government officials and businessmen, and I asked them all one question:
When you go outside, how many security guards do you take with you? The
answers were: 20, 6, 1, 8, 10, 2, 3, 8 and 5. No surprise. Some 3,000 people
were kidnapped here last year by guerrillas, and many judges and journalists
threatened with chilling messages, such as having funeral wreaths sent to
their homes -- with their names on them.
This is the terrifying context Americans have to keep in mind as they
consider whether the U.S. Senate should approve the $1.7 billion plan to
strengthen Colombia's ability to fight drug traffickers and forge a peace
with the guerrillas. There are two ways to think about "Plan Colombia." One
way is to get wrapped up in the details -- the helicopters, the training.
The other way -- the right way -- is to step back and ask yourself what kind
of courage it takes to stay in Colombia right now and be a judge who puts
drug lords in jail or a politician who fights for the rule of law -- knowing
the criminals have millions and would kill your kids in a second.
It takes real courage, and that's why the people trying to hold this place
together deserve U.S. support. Sure, the democratic government of President
Andres Pastrana isn't perfect. But it has a core of decent officials who
risk their lives just going to work. Would you have the same courage?
I asked Pastrana why he stays. "This is our country, it's the only country
we have to leave to our children," shrugged the president, who was once
kidnapped while running for Bogota mayor. "I believe in this country so much
that even after being kidnapped, and even after having my wife's father
killed by kidnappers, my wife and I had another baby -- a girl. Look, we've
sacrificed the best policemen, the best judges, the best journalists in this
country. Whatever you want to write about us, don't write that we are not on
the front line in the war on drugs."
I asked the head of Colombia's navy, Adm. Sergio Garcia, what it was like to
be an officer here. He said it was sort of like being a movie star, with
people always trying to get at you, only they don't want your autograph,
they want to kill you -- "so even your friends don't want to be in a
restaurant with you, and they don't want their kids near your kids."
Colombians tell this joke: After God created Colombia, an angel asked why He
gave all the beauty to one country -- rain forests, mountains, oceans,
savanna? God answered: "Ha! Wait till you see what kind of people I put
there!"
FOR YEARS, Colombia's mafia processed cocaine grown from coca in Peru. But
as Peru drove the coca growers out, they migrated to the rain forest in
Southern Colombia -- one of the largest unbroken expanses of rain forest
left on Earth, but also a region without much government. The drug mafia is
now chopping down the rain forest, then laying down herbicides, planting
coca, processing it into cocaine, throwing the chemicals in the rivers, and
then flying the drugs.
Underlying Colombia's drug war is a real 40-year-old social struggle between
Marxist guerrillas and right-wing vigilantes (32,000 killings last year).
But let's cut the nonsense: Colombia's guerrillas may have started as a
romantic movement against an unjust oligarchy, but today they fight because
they make tons of money protecting drug operations in the rain forest. In
between the guerrillas and the vigilantes (who also profit from drugs),
Colombia's silent majority is held hostage.
Yes, Colombians are at fault for having been too tolerant of the early drug
lords. Americans are at fault for their insatiable appetite for cocaine. But
here's the bottom line: If the Colombian majority gets the aid it needs to
fight the drug Mafia there is a chance -- and it's no sure thing -- for
domestic peace. If they don't -- and this is a sure thing -- the problem
will only get worse, it will spew instability across this region, and the
only rain forest your kids will ever see is one of the Rainforest Cafe
restaurants.
BOGOTA, Colombia -- I had a chat in Bogota the other day with a group of
government officials and businessmen, and I asked them all one question:
When you go outside, how many security guards do you take with you? The
answers were: 20, 6, 1, 8, 10, 2, 3, 8 and 5. No surprise. Some 3,000 people
were kidnapped here last year by guerrillas, and many judges and journalists
threatened with chilling messages, such as having funeral wreaths sent to
their homes -- with their names on them.
This is the terrifying context Americans have to keep in mind as they
consider whether the U.S. Senate should approve the $1.7 billion plan to
strengthen Colombia's ability to fight drug traffickers and forge a peace
with the guerrillas. There are two ways to think about "Plan Colombia." One
way is to get wrapped up in the details -- the helicopters, the training.
The other way -- the right way -- is to step back and ask yourself what kind
of courage it takes to stay in Colombia right now and be a judge who puts
drug lords in jail or a politician who fights for the rule of law -- knowing
the criminals have millions and would kill your kids in a second.
It takes real courage, and that's why the people trying to hold this place
together deserve U.S. support. Sure, the democratic government of President
Andres Pastrana isn't perfect. But it has a core of decent officials who
risk their lives just going to work. Would you have the same courage?
I asked Pastrana why he stays. "This is our country, it's the only country
we have to leave to our children," shrugged the president, who was once
kidnapped while running for Bogota mayor. "I believe in this country so much
that even after being kidnapped, and even after having my wife's father
killed by kidnappers, my wife and I had another baby -- a girl. Look, we've
sacrificed the best policemen, the best judges, the best journalists in this
country. Whatever you want to write about us, don't write that we are not on
the front line in the war on drugs."
I asked the head of Colombia's navy, Adm. Sergio Garcia, what it was like to
be an officer here. He said it was sort of like being a movie star, with
people always trying to get at you, only they don't want your autograph,
they want to kill you -- "so even your friends don't want to be in a
restaurant with you, and they don't want their kids near your kids."
Colombians tell this joke: After God created Colombia, an angel asked why He
gave all the beauty to one country -- rain forests, mountains, oceans,
savanna? God answered: "Ha! Wait till you see what kind of people I put
there!"
FOR YEARS, Colombia's mafia processed cocaine grown from coca in Peru. But
as Peru drove the coca growers out, they migrated to the rain forest in
Southern Colombia -- one of the largest unbroken expanses of rain forest
left on Earth, but also a region without much government. The drug mafia is
now chopping down the rain forest, then laying down herbicides, planting
coca, processing it into cocaine, throwing the chemicals in the rivers, and
then flying the drugs.
Underlying Colombia's drug war is a real 40-year-old social struggle between
Marxist guerrillas and right-wing vigilantes (32,000 killings last year).
But let's cut the nonsense: Colombia's guerrillas may have started as a
romantic movement against an unjust oligarchy, but today they fight because
they make tons of money protecting drug operations in the rain forest. In
between the guerrillas and the vigilantes (who also profit from drugs),
Colombia's silent majority is held hostage.
Yes, Colombians are at fault for having been too tolerant of the early drug
lords. Americans are at fault for their insatiable appetite for cocaine. But
here's the bottom line: If the Colombian majority gets the aid it needs to
fight the drug Mafia there is a chance -- and it's no sure thing -- for
domestic peace. If they don't -- and this is a sure thing -- the problem
will only get worse, it will spew instability across this region, and the
only rain forest your kids will ever see is one of the Rainforest Cafe
restaurants.
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