Pubdate: Wed,  25 Jul 2001
Source: Village Voice (NY)
Column: Mondo Washington
Copyright: 2001 Village Voice Media, Inc
Contact:  http://www.villagevoice.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/482
Author: James Ridgeway
Note: Additional reporting: Ariston-Lizabeth Anderson and Sandra Bisin

AGENT ORANGE, ALL OVER AGAIN

EPA Stalled Resolution on Spraying in Colombia

Washington, D.C.--For seven months, the Environmental Protection Agency sat 
on a call to investigate the coca-defoliation program in Colombia. 
Presented by one of the agency's own internal boards, the letter asked for 
a study of harm to people and the environment posed by the U.S.-backed 
spraying of Roundup Ultra, a chemical critics compare to Agent Orange. When 
the resolution was proposed at a December 10 meeting of the National 
Environmental Justice Advisory Council, "there was a lot of eye rolling and 
clearing of throats among the EPA members," said one government employee. 
No one from EPA "thought it had a snowball's chance in hell" of reaching 
administrator Christie Whitman's desk.

Those EPA members may seem jaded, but for a long while they also appeared 
to be right. President Bush has kept the agency hamstrung, forcing it to do 
an about-face on global warming and to relax water-quality standards. Now 
the president is seeking yet more funding for Plan Colombia, which is 
supposed to cut off the supply of cocaine on the streets of New York by 
halving the 300,000 acres of coca fields in Colombia over five years. The 
U.S. has pledged $1.3 billion in this fiscal year to support the $7.5 
billion scheme with army anti-narcotics training and helicopters.

So far, the attack hasn't worked. Over 38,000 hectares have been sprayed 
since this year alone, but coca production is shifting to other parts of 
Colombia and spreading into Ecuador. The program has become the pretext for 
a Vietnam-style counterinsurgency in which U.S.-trained units of the 
Colombian army link up with paramilitary death squads in a bloody drive 
against guerrillas. U.S. Special Forces, who are doing the training, are 
kept out of the fighting, but U.S. civilian contractors who fly the spray 
planes have been reported in the thick of firefights.

Meanwhile, the peasantry are getting drenched with Roundup Ultra. In one 
EPA study published in 1993, California doctors reported that the 
herbicide's active ingredient, glyphosate, ranked third out of 25 chemicals 
that caused harm to humans. Some observers say the aircraft blitzing 
Colombian coca fields are flying at too great a height to ensure 
surrounding villages and farms are kept safe from the spray. Lower flights 
would court direct hits by rebel troops.

"Our concern is the longevity of the effects of the spraying: If the 
farmers can't plant, they can't grow or eat," said Alberto Saldamando, 
general counsel of the San Francisco-based International Indian Treaty 
Council, who drafted the resolution. "This is going to affect the whole 
agricultural economy. We think it's a very serious health-damaging case. We 
are talking about indigenous people. They are poor; they are not aware of 
what can happen to their health."

After being approved at the board meeting, the request for an investigation 
went to the agency's Office of Environmental Justice, a sort of clearing 
house and rewrite operation for advisory-group resolutions before they are 
sent up to the administrator. Sure enough, the letter disappeared amid 
complaints it was full of typographical errors.

It never reached the outgoing Clinton administrator, Carol Browner, and the 
issue was temporarily set aside as Bush took control of the White House. 
Next, the letter was kicked over to the Office of International Activities, 
where bureaucrats argued pro and con.

Eventually the resolution was sent back to the advisory board for its 
approval. There it sat. Peggy Shepard, executive director of the West 
Harlem Environmental Action and chair of the board, said Monday she only 
got the letter two weeks ago. She then cleaned it up and forwarded it to 
Whitman. "The letter was not withheld," she explained. "I simply did not 
sign it because I thought it was weak grammatically and lacking factually 
and needed to be fixed." As for Whitman's expected response, Shepard said, 
"We have no idea. We have not had any interaction with the administrator 
since she's been appointed."

Roundup is sold widely in the U.S., and the EPA says it's safe for most 
commercial uses. According to the State Department's Web site, glyphosate 
is less toxic than common salt, aspirin, caffeine, nicotine, and vitamin A. 
In a report sent to the House Appropriations Committee in January, the 
State Department, with the concurrence of the EPA, claimed that "there are 
no grounds to suggest a concern for human health."

But in a 1996 out-of-court settlement, the manufacturer Monsanto admitted 
to certain reservations about such glyphosate-based herbicides. Monsanto 
withdrew claims that Roundup is "safe, nontoxic, harmless, or free from 
risk," and signed a statement, saying absolute claims that Roundup "will 
not wash or leach in the soil" aren't accurate. Roundup Ultra, the product 
used in Colombia, is a concoction boosted by other powerful chemicals 
manufactured by ICI and Exxon.

Sources within the agency doubt that Whitman will support the proposal to 
study the effects of Roundup on civilians and the environment. An EPA 
spokesman acknowledged that Whitman's deputy administrator, Linda Fisher, 
is a former Monsanto vice president, but said the EPA has no role in the 
spraying.

"We do not govern the use of Roundup in another country," the spokesman 
said. "Anything we say about the use of chemicals in another country is 
only speculation because we have no authority to check what they're doing."

For critics, the need for some kind of check is clear. "We demonstrated 
concern over Roundup that was being used without warning or telling people 
what was in it," Saldamando recalled. "There is a lack of public awareness 
in the U.S. and especially in Colombia. Children become sick and adults 
start getting rashes."

Plan Colombia has a short but dubious history. In 1999, the General 
Accounting Office concluded that "U.S. and Colombian efforts to eradicate 
enough coca and opium poppy to reduce the net cultivation of these crops 
have not succeeded to date." Despite fumigating 65,938 hectares of 
Colombian coca in 1998, the office wrote, the total number of hectares of 
coca under cultivation in Colombia grew from 101,800 to 122,500.

Defoliation merely sends production elsewhere. Successful eradication 
programs in Bolivia and Peru in the 1990s led to a sharp rise in production 
in Colombia. "The pattern has been that fumigation 'chases' coca 
cultivation from one area to another, while overall cultivation levels 
rise," noted a report last month from the Washington Office on Latin 
America. Fumigation does result in a short-term increase in coca prices, 
but, according to the Drug Enforcement Agency, hasn't caused any change in 
the price of cocaine in the U.S. And while the military aspects of the plan 
have been in full effect, promised alternative assistance to farmers has 
not begun, the report said.

Democratic congresswoman Jan Schakowsky, who represents the Chicago 
suburbs, is offering a measure--along with Democrats John Conyers of 
Detroit and Cynthia McKinney of suburban Atlanta--to stop funding for the 
fumigation project. In February, Schakowsky took a fact-finding mission to 
Putumayo Province, where she met with health ministers, governors, mayors, 
and police, all of whom reported Roundup's devastating effects.

"People told of rashes and intestinal problems," Schakowsky said. "There is 
an increasing number of internally displaced humans. It has destroyed legal 
crops and livelihood."

As for the overall effectiveness of the program, said the congresswoman, 
"We've seen no change in the availability or price of cocaine. Coca 
production simply moves. It doesn't take a genius to figure out that if 
demand is strong you move your operation. Fumigation is never going to get 
ahead of that." 
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake