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News (Media Awareness Project) - US MN: PUB LTE: US Policy Against Drugs Hits Wrong Target
Title:US MN: PUB LTE: US Policy Against Drugs Hits Wrong Target
Published On:2002-12-11
Source:Minnesota Daily (MN Edu)
Fetched On:2008-01-21 17:41:49
U.S. POLICY AGAINST DRUGS HITS WRONG TARGET

Part of the Plan Colombia legislation passed under the Bill Clinton
administration includes crop fumigation as a tactic in the U.S.
government's "war on drugs." Briefly, this aspect of Plan Colombia entails
spraying coca fields with pesticides to kill the crop. Coca is the plant
from which cocaine can be derived.

Several flaws exist in this plan, which adversely affect both the Colombian
people and the so-called drug war.

Crop-dusting planes fumigate with a more powerful concentrate of the
commercially available Roundup. This highly toxic chemical not only kills
coca plants, but also yucca, beans, rice, coffee and other crops that
people sell or eat. Killing a farmer's crops is devastating, and Roundup
makes it impossible to continue cultivating the land. It leaves the farmer
with two choices: He can clear more forest for new land, which further
depletes the rainforest. Or he could move to the already-crowded Colombian
cities where unemployment rates are high. This is an important example of
the economic and public health consequences borne by the people who are
most closely affected by this U.S. policy.

Direct exposure to the toxic chemicals used for fumigation as well as
contaminated water sources has begun a disturbing trend of health problems
in Colombia.

The solution might seem obvious.

Colombian farmers should not grow coca to avoid having their crops fumigated.

This solution is not realistic for the same reason that Plan Colombia is a
wasted effort in the war on drugs.

An entire growing season is lost to a farmer when crops are fumigated.

It takes more than a year for a crop of bananas or yucca to mature,
especially when it is necessary to establish a new field.

On the other hand, it takes only four months for a crop of coca to mature
and be ready to sell. Besides, it is easier to grow coca than food crops on
soil contaminated by the fumigation, and drug cartels are often willing to
provide the coca seed and pay in advance for their crops.

The immediate economic benefits of growing coca as a cash crop for a small
farmer whose livelihood has been destroyed are obvious.

The Plan Colombia fumigation policy is one that fosters the establishment
of more coca fields, not one that eliminates them.

The United States has spent over $1.9 billion in aid to Colombian security
forces, and most of this money has been used for crop fumigation. The war
on drugs is already a contested U.S. policy.

Plan Colombia begs several questions: Is crop fumigation an effective
tactic in the war on drugs?

The annual U.S. military budget, at $396 billion, is far larger than the
budgets for health and educational services combined.

Is this the most effective use of the United States' extravagant military
budget?

Should the majority of the monetary aid sent to Colombia be used to degrade
the environment and threaten people's health?

Why are our tax dollars being spent on a futile effort that not only kills
plants but also people?
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