Pubdate: Sat, 02 Dec 2000
Source: Newsday (NY)
Copyright: 2000, Newsday Inc.
Contact:  (516)843-2986
Website: http://www.newsday.com/
Author: Associated Press

WELLSTONE CONTINUES DRUG FIGHT

Minneapolis - Sen. Paul Wellstone, steadfast opponent of the Clinton 
administration's $1.3-billion anti-drug aid package for Colombia, returned 
from an inspection tour of the country Friday, saying human-rights 
violations were flagrant and the root of the country's turmoil.

"So many of the people there doing the human-rights work are under siege," 
the Minnesota Democrat said at a news conference. "The violence there is so 
pervasive." Wellstone fought unsuccessfully to convert some of the vast 
sums earmarked for Colombia to domestic drug treatment programs. He claims 
U.S. spending - mainly for helicopters and other military equipment - will 
only worsen the country's guerrilla war and could drag the United States 
into the four-decade-old conflict.

"He was the only one out there - or at least the loudest out there - who 
was worried about the effect it would have in getting the United States 
into the conflict, the effect on the peace process and whether it would 
affect drug policy at all," said Adam Isacson of the Center for 
International Policy, which opposes the aid plan.

After President Bill Clinton signed the aid package in July, Wellstone 
continued to be outspoken, criticizing the administration for waiving 
human-rights conditions that could have blocked the aid and opposing 
Republican efforts to add another $99 million to it.

The senator said U.S. drug strategy is destined to fail unless poor 
Colombians have an alternative to the drug traffickers and the United 
States cuts its demand for cocaine. The leftist rebels fighting the 
government partly finance their insurgency through pay for protecting coca 
fields and cocaine laboratories. "We're too lopsided on the military part 
and not enough on the economic development part," he said.

During the tour, Wellstone and U.S. Ambassador Anne Patterson visited 
Barrancabermeja, called the violent country's deadliest town. Human-rights 
activists claim there have been 500 political murders there this year 
alone, as the right-wing paramilitary and rebels fight to control the region.

Hours before Wellstone and Patterson arrived, police said they found two 
shrapnel-encased land mines along the road from the airport into the city. 
The two Americans flew by helicopter from the airfield, bypassing the area.

Police Col. Jose Miguel Villar said the mines were set in an assassination 
attempt and arrested a suspected member of the rebel National Liberation 
Army, who is being questioned.

But Colombian National Police and the U.S. State Department said they did 
not think Wellstone and Patterson had been targeted.

"I don't know whether I was targeted, but I certainly know that the 
human-rights activists are targeted," Wellstone said. "It's a small story 
that tells the larger story of what's happening in Colombia. It's so 
tragic. And I'm glad that I went." The senator said he believed his 
Colombian hosts used the bomb story to dissuade him from traveling to other 
dangerous regions.
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