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News (Media Awareness Project) - Bolivia: Coca Grower to Fight Drugs
Title:Bolivia: Coca Grower to Fight Drugs
Published On:2006-01-29
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-01-14 18:02:46
Coca Grower to Fight Drugs

SHINAHOTA, Bolivia - President Evo Morales on Saturday appointed a
coca leaf grower to lead the country's fight against drugs.

Morales announced the appointment of Felipe Caceres, a co-founder of
his Movement Toward Socialism party, during a trip to the heart of
Bolivia's coca-growing region.

"A coca farmer is going to be in charge of the fight against drugs,"
Morales said, wearing a hat of woven coca leaves. He drew loud
applause from hundreds of people, many of them coca farmers, gathered
in this lush jungle town.

Morales, who as a candidate pledged to roll back U.S. efforts to curb
coca growing in his country, the world's third-biggest cocaine
producer, took office a week ago.

The previous head of Bolivia's anti-drug efforts worked closely with
Washington, which spends about $150 million a year on coca-
eradication programs in the South American country.

Morales first rose to political prominence as the leader of the
country's coca farmers, and led sometimes violent protests against
U.S.-backed eradication efforts.

He said the struggle to preserve the legal growing of the plant was
deeply tied to his political party, known popularly by its initials,
MAS. "MAS was born from the coca leaf," he said. "We will never be
separated."

The cultivation and sale of small amounts of coca is legal in Bolivia,
with the limit set at 30,000 acres. But the United States contends
that larger crops of the plant, which is used to make cocaine,
eventually end up on illegal drug markets.

The plant is prized by Bolivian indigenous farmers for traditional
medicinal uses and herbal teas. Indians in Bolivia chew coca, a mild
stimulant, to ward off hunger and altitude sickness. Morales has said
he wants to increase production of the leaf for use in medicines,
toothpaste and soft drinks.

Morales, insisting that he is opposed to drug trafficking, has said he
is seeking a drug-fighting program that would say, "No to zero coca,
but yes to zero cocaine."
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