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News (Media Awareness Project) - Colombia: US Giving More Coca Eradication Planes To Colombia
Title:Colombia: US Giving More Coca Eradication Planes To Colombia
Published On:2006-04-17
Source:Boston Globe (MA)
Fetched On:2008-01-14 07:27:18
US GIVING MORE COCA ERADICATION PLANES TO COLOMBIA

BOGOTA, Colombia - The United States will give three additional
planes to Colombia this year to help its fleet of 21 aircraft already
spraying defoliants on plants used to make cocaine, a top U.S.
official said on Monday.

The planned move follows a report showing an increase in coca crops
in the Andean country and a request from Colombian President Alvaro
Uribe for more anti-drug assistance.

The U.S. government's 2005 survey of Colombia's coca crop found 26
percent more land dedicated to coca cultivation than in 2004 after
nearly doubling the area surveyed.

Washington has given Colombia about $4 billion in aid since 2000,
aimed in large part at combating the country's huge cocaine trade.

"There are more spray aircraft slated for Colombia, the number is
three at the moment," David Murray, policy analyst at the U.S. Office
of National Drug Control Policy, told Reuters.

Uribe called on Monday for the United States to increase its
eradication assistance and said Colombia's national police would
revise its anti-drug strategy in light of the U.S. report, which
found that coca plants in the same areas surveyed in both 2004 and
2005 fell by about 8 percent.

The primary growing areas surveyed by the U.S. government in past
years are concentrated in the southwest of the country. The areas
surveyed for the first time in 2005 extended north and northeast from
those original areas.

"We had been looking at roughly 10.4 million hectares (25.7 million
acres) in the past and that was increased to 19.8 million (48.9
million acres) last year," Murray said.

The survey area was increased in order to detect lands newly planted
by coca farmers who had been forced out of areas already sprayed, he said.

"We wanted a sense of how much expansion was going on out of the
dense areas that had been hard hit by eradication," Murray said. "We
felt it would be good to cast a wider eye."

Critics of the spraying say it forces farmers to hurt Colombia's
ecosystem by cutting into previously uncultivated jungle. Murray
dismissed this criticism, saying cocaine producers tend to expand
cultivation areas with or without spraying.

Areas under eradication pressure saw a 10 percent reduction in coca
plantation, he said.

"Where we spray it works," Murray said. "We are gradually tightening
the noose."

Colombia, in a four-decade-old guerrilla war in which both left-wing
rebels and far-right paramilitaries use the drug trade to fund their
operations, is the source of 90 percent of the cocaine that ends up
on U.S. streets, according to the U.S. government.

Thousands are killed and tens of thousands are forced from their
homes by the war every year.

The paramilitaries are giving up their arms in return for reduced
prison sentences under a peace plan negotiated with the government.
But human rights groups say the militias are not being forced to
dismantle their drug smuggling and extortion networks as part of the deal.
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