Pubdate: Sat, 24 Mar 2001
Source: Associated Press
Copyright: 2001 Associated Press
Author: Michael Easterbrook
Note: See the report below, following the AP story, for a more detailed 
analysis of glyphosate's effects than the one offered by Rep. Kolbe - 
provided by Newshawk

U.S. CONGRESSMAN SAYS HERBICIDE BEING USED IN COLOMBIA DRUG FIGHT ISN'T 
DANGEROUS

Rep. Jim Kolbe Said Saturday That He Uses The Herbicide Glyphosate - 
Marketed In The United
States As Roundup - To Kill Weeds That Grow Outside His Vacation Cabin Back 
Home

BOGOTA -- A U.S. lawmaker defended the use of a herbicide being used to 
kill drug crops in Colombia, calling criticism that it causes environmental 
damage and illness unfounded.

Rep. Jim Kolbe said Saturday that he uses the herbicide glyphosate - 
marketed in the United States as Roundup - to kill weeds that grow outside 
his vacation cabin back home.

"I think the fears about this are unfounded," said the Arizona Republican, 
who is heading a four-person congressional delegation that arrived Friday 
for a three-day visit. "It's impossible to eradicate the coca in the very 
distance reaches of Colombia without using this aerial spraying."

Crop dusters protected by U.S.-donated combat helicopters have eradicated 
thousands of acres of coca, the main ingredient of cocaine, since 
fumigations began last December.

Reports have surfaced that the sprayings are causing ailments like skin 
rashes and respiratory problems. Environmentalists say fragile ecosystems 
are being hurt.

The U.S. State Department has said there are no harmful effects from the 
herbicide. U.S. Ambassador Anne Patterson decided recently to dispatch a 
medical team to investigate complaints.

The drug war is being funded through a $1.3 billion aid package from 
Washington that includes troop training and dozens of combat helicopters. 
Critics say the aid package is bent too heavily toward military help and 
should include more money for social programs.

But at a press conference late Saturday, Kolbe said the military backing is 
essential in order to curb the country's narcotics industry. Most of the 
cocaine and a growing portion of heroin consumed in the U.S. come from 
Colombia.

Sen. Paul Wellstone, a Minnesota Democrat who opposes the aid package, also 
arrived Friday on a separate two-day visit.

COUNTER-FACT SHEET - THE AERIAL ERADICATION OF ILLICIT CROPS: ANSWERS TO 
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (ACCION ANDINA - March 2001)

QUESTION: What is the aerial eradication program?

ANSWER: Aerial spraying of illicit crops has taken place in Colombia since 
the seventies, as part of a supply-reduction strategy. Marijuana was the 
first crop fumigated; coca and poppy followed. Various herbicides have been 
used in the process. Over 200,000 hectares of coca and 60,000 hectares of 
poppy were sprayed in the last decade, using more than three million liters 
of glyphosate. Nearly 25 years of aerial spraying amply demonstrate that 
the strategy is not effective, though. In fact, aerial fumigation 
contributed to significantly increasing illicit crop acreage, not the 
opposite. The supply-reduction strategy and the way in which spraying is 
carried out in Colombia have only served to unleash a vicious cycle of 
destruction. This cycle causes pollution, also driving crops deeper and 
deeper into the jungle and thus causing drastic deforestation.

Displaced crops are, in turn, sprayed again and the cycle repeats itself.

Aerial fumigation also forms part of a war structure in Colombia. There are 
not only technical factors related to herbicides, environmental impact and 
so on involved. Fumigation in itself calls for war logistics and security 
measures. Spraying craft tend to be accompanied by helicopters and at times 
this involves firing machine guns on areas adjacent to crops, causing panic 
among the communities.

QUESTION: How are spray targets selected?

ANSWER: In spite of the highly sophisticated precision instruments 
currently available to select spray targets (aerial photographs and 
satellite images; the Global Positioning System for charting flight 
courses, etc), many cases involving the destruction of legal crops and 
alternative development projects can be documented. Aerial fumigation has 
targeted home patches, ponds and water sources that should never have been 
the object of this policy. This seriously questions the effectiveness of 
the techniques or the selection criteria used, which do not stop at the 
intentional destruction of subsistence economies.

QUESTION: What is the role of the U.S. government in the aerial eradication 
program?

ANSWER: The U.S. government sets the eradication goals for the Colombian 
Anti-Narcotics Police. It trains fumigation personnel or hires private 
enterprises to undertake spray operations directly. NAS (Narcotics Affairs 
Section) supplies the herbicide Roundup (active ingredient glyphosate), 
aircraft, training and communication equipment. The Colombian Police 
controls spraying in the designated areas, using air bases staffed by the 
NAS personnel in charge of follow-up activities. The U.S. government 
certifies Colombia each year, or refuses to certify it, for its anti-drugs 
efforts.

QUESTION: What type of environmental monitoring and oversight is there?

ANSWER: In Colombia, monitoring the effects of fumigation on the 
environment involves a structural problem. Related studies are not made 
independently. Due to the nature of the contractual agreements reached 
until now, such evaluations have a priori defended the interests of 
contractors. In all 25 years, an independent, and thus credible and 
impartial supervision has never taken place. Such a study should be 
convened with a body designed to exert control, like the People's 
Ombudsman, the Attorney General or the General Accounting Office, not with 
the same entity that is to be supervised, in this case the anti-drugs 
authorities.

QUESTION: What chemicals are being used in Colombia for the eradication of 
illicit crops?

ANSWER: The State Department's response to this question is that only 
glyphosate is being used. This answer is not satisfactory, however, since 
the sprays applied not only contain glyphosate but a mixture of other 
ingredients. It is common knowledge, for example, that Roundup, a 
commercial formula registered by the Monsanto Company, contains a 
surfactant called polyoxyethylamine (POEA), which is much more toxic than 
glyphosate. Roundup has very different toxic properties from glyphosate in 
its pure form. A modified formula based on Roundup has been applied since 
1999. It is called Roundup Ultra and is spiked with the antifoaming 
Cosmo-In-D, and the adjuvant Cosmo-Flux 411F , both found on the Colombian 
market. These substances greatly enhance the action of agrochemicals, 
making them more powerful at lower dosages. This change in the commercial 
preparation was decided arbitrarily, ignoring national legislation and 
institutional procedures.

On the other hand, although little is known about the danger of introducing 
mycoherbicides into the ecosystem until now, lately the U.S. has been 
insisting on the use of biological agents. The Fusarium oxysporum fungus 
was developed in laboratories in the United States for the purpose of 
attacking the coca bush. Fortunately, environmental authorities from 
Colombia and other Andean countries have recently taken a strong stand 
against this measure.

QUESTION: Has glyphosate been tested for environmental safety?

ANSWER: Insofar as glyphosate is not the problem, strictly speaking, any 
debate limited to the chemical is a sham, completely ignoring the serious 
doubts raised by the commercial sprays currently in use. As stated, 
glyphosate is not used alone. The studies on glyphosates environmental 
safety are incomplete if they do not consider its action combined with 
other ingredients, which at present are not even mentioned on formula 
labels. The habit of using the word glyphosate to avoid naming the added 
ingredients serves to deceive public opinion and society as a whole about 
the potential dangers for the environment and for the population exposed to 
the toxic effects of these substances. Another aspect that the U.S. 
government fails to mention is the concentration of Roundup used. Failing 
to guarantee the herbicide's safety and violating the norms based on 
technical trials, the concentration now employed for coca is 10 
liters/hectare, which means 2.7 gallons of herbicide for each 2.5 acres of 
coca.

QUESTION: Does glyphosate harm cattle, chickens or other farm animals?

ANSWER: Hair loss is the most visible symptom in cattle affected by 
fumigation, especially among calves and breeding cows. Hair loss is caused 
by moderate exposure and gradually disappears as the cattle are moved to 
non-fumigated pastures. Abortion is frequent among pregnant cows, possibly 
affected by the noise of overhead helicopters, which startles them causing 
stampedes. Death of fowl affected by spraying or drinking contaminated 
water has been confirmed, as well as the death of fish in sprayed rivers, 
and the totality of the pond fish bred by settlers for their own 
consumption or to supply local inhabitants.

QUESTION: Is glyphosate harmful to human beings?

ANSWER: The State Department assures us that glyphosate is less harmful 
than common salt, aspirin, caffeine, nicotine and even Vitamin A. However, 
studies carried out on the effects of commercial preparations containing 
glyphosate reveal a very different panorama. In various countries, Roundup 
is classified among the first pesticides to cause poisoning in humans.

Most cases involve skin and eye irritations in workers after exposure 
during the mixing, transportation or application of the product. Nausea, 
respiratory difficulty, alterations in blood pressure and allergic 
reactions have also been reported. Doctors in Japan have certified cases of 
poisoning, mainly through accidental swallowing of Roundup, but also 
through occupational exposure. The symptoms of acute poisoning include 
gastrointestinal pain, massive loss of gastrointestinal fluid, vomit, 
excess lung fluid, pulmonary congestion or failure, loss of consciousness, 
destruction of red blood corpuscles and kidney damage or failure.

Following repeated fumigation, the Yanacona Indians in Cauca are suffering 
many of these symptoms. The dwellings in this community have been sprayed 
indiscriminately, children being the most affected. The People's Ombudsman 
documents countless cases of complaints filed by peasants exposed to 
spraying. Though many questions remain unanswered on the use of commercial 
preparations, especially with regard to Roundup Ultra + Cosmoflux, it is 
worth pointing out that both children and adults in sprayed areas are 
suffering from severe skin disorders nowadays.

QUESTION: Does glyphosate destroy the soil and prevent plant growth?

ANSWER: Information regarding glyphosate mobility and persistence in the 
soil varies. It is known to be almost static in soils. It remains in the 
upper soil layers, with little propensity for percolation and a low runoff 
potential. Other studies, however, conclude that glyphosate can easily be 
leached from some types of soil; that is, glyphosate particles may be 
released, thus becoming quite mobile. Sub-lethal glyphosate doses carried 
by the wind (drift) damage wild flowers and can affect certain species more 
than 20 meters away from the site fumigated.

Analyzing glyphosate residue is costly and cumbersome. For this reason, the 
U.S. government does not routinely carry out such studies. Some research 
does exist, though, demonstrating that glyphosate can be carried by plants 
to the parts used for food. For example, glyphosate has been found in 
strawberries, blueberries, raspberries, lettuce, carrots and barley after 
its application. According to the World Health Organization, using 
glyphosate to dry the grain before wheat is harvested results in 
"significant residues" in the grain.

And once again: Why does the State Department not say anything about the 
impact on soil and plants of the other ingredients being used in the 
commercial formulas with glyphosate?

QUESTION: Does glyphosate contaminate the water where it is sprayed?

ANSWER: Glyphosate is highly soluble in water. According to EPA (U.S. 
Environmental Protection Agency), it can enter aquatic systems through 
accidental spraying, drift or surface runoff. It is considered to disappear 
rapidly in water, as a result of adsorption to particles in suspension such 
as organic and mineral particles, to sediments and probably by microbial 
decomposition. If we accept that glyphosate is easily adsorbed into soil 
particles, it will have little potential to contaminate surface and ground 
waters. But if it is de-adsorbed or easily leached from soil particles, as 
it has been proven already, the situation changes. What is known is that 
glyphosate has contaminated ground and surface waters in various countries.

QUESTION: Is glyphosate dangerous for the environment?

ANSWER: Glyphosate is toxic for some beneficial organisms such as parasitic 
wasps and other arthropod predators, and soil arthropods that are important 
for soil aeration and humus formation. Some fish varieties are susceptible 
to Roundup, which is approximately 30 times more toxic to fish than 
glyphosate used alone. A study of rainbow trout and tilapia fish found that 
the chemical caused erratic swimming and respiratory difficulties among 
them. These behavioral changes altered their feeding, migration and 
reproduction capacity and they also lost the ability to defend themselves. 
As to how glyphosate affects birds, a study of exposed bird populations 
showed that the product is moderately toxic for birds; the changes it 
causes in plants affect birds, because they depend on such plants for food, 
protection and nestling. Field studies have demonstrated that some groups 
of small mammals have also been affected by glyphosate, due to death of the 
vegetation that either they or their prey use for foodstuff and protection. 
A study made in New Zealand showed that glyphosate substantially affected 
the growth and survival of one of the most common worms found in its 
farming soil.

Fumigation severely affects one of the most vital components of the Amazon 
ecosystem, known as the cananguchales. Clusters of canangucha palms form 
oases in the Amazon, inhabited by a great variety of animals and birds.

Water constantly surrounds the palms in each oasis. Many cananguchales have 
been affected beyond salvation by spraying, when glyphosate has been 
transported by the wind or through the soil. The cananguchales are found on 
low terrains, which makes it easier for the water from fields sprayed 
nearby to reach them.

QUESTION: If glyphosate is so benign - like the State Department claims - 
why are there complaints of damage from its use in Colombia?

ANSWER: The State Department says that it does not have reliable sources on 
which to ground complaints against glyphosate. Armed groups financed by 
drugs file these complaints, it claims. However, just glancing through the 
files of the People's Ombudsman in Colombia, it is possible to confirm the 
existence of many complaints presented by individuals or by communities 
suffering the consequences of aerial spraying directly. There are also 
numerous studies and analyses carried out by prestigious scientific 
institutions in Colombia (such as the Andes University), or abroad, whose 
results produce evidence of how harmful the pesticides in question really 
are. Fumigation and its catastrophic impact at every level has been the 
subject of many articles, interviews, editorials and press releases in the 
media, in Colombia and other parts of the world.

QUESTION: How are complaints about glyphosate investigated?

ANSWER: Unfortunately, the Colombian state and the entities in charge of 
investigating reports dealing with the effects of fumigation on human 
health and legitimate crops do not carry out thorough inspections or 
studies. This is true in spite of the fact that the Ombudsman has clearly 
expressed that enough serious suspicions exist to warrant making serious, 
exhaustive investigations. The Ombudsman has processed hundreds of 
complaints and conducted verification missions to investigate such claims 
independently and on the ground. The People's Ombudsman published "Illicit 
Crops: World Policy and Reality in Colombia" recently, a book specifically 
referring to health problems, particularly skin, respiratory and digestive 
disorders and irritation of the membranes and eyes among those inhabiting 
the areas fumigated. The Ombudsman's Office is currently investigating 
human casualties that have been denounced recently, deaths taking place in 
the Putumayo after the introduction of the new Roundup Ultra + Cosmoflux 
formula in the area. The Health and Environment Ministries and other 
government bodies remain passive, insisting that the complaints made by the 
population serve the interests of the insurgency. They often state that the 
peasants are allies of the guerrilla, thus invalidating claims of any kind 
and even ignoring the evidence of illnesses.

QUESTION: Is spraying contributing to the deforestation of Colombia?

ANSWER: An argument often used to legitimate spraying is that illicit crops 
and drug processing affect the environment and contribute more to 
deforestation than aerial spraying. Although surely both illicit crops and 
their processing cause serious harm to the environment, the same is no less 
true for fumigation. If their plots are sprayed, coca farmers see the need 
to go deeper into the jungle to plant new crops. The deforestation and 
pollution this causes will have been indirectly motivated by the spraying 
of their plots. For simple reasons of survival, while the Amazon basin 
exists as a potential cultivation area, each hectare fumigated will be 
substituted by another hectare further inside the jungle. Chemical spraying 
continuously displaces the cultivated areas towards ecologically more 
vulnerable territories, multiplying the effects of deforestation on the 
Amazon and the Andean mountains.

QUESTION: Why doesn't the United States government fund alternative 
development programs instead of spraying illegal crops?

ANSWER: One of the most drastic arguments wielded by the U.S. anti-drugs 
authorities is that they refuse to finance alternative development programs 
in areas not under the control of the Colombian government, or in which the 
state is not fully sovereign, which is the case of areas under insurgent 
control. Defining territorial control as a basic premise of alternative 
development inserts North American aid into the very frame of the armed 
conflict. Without a guarantee of control, the U.S. government simply does 
not support this type of activity.

In the North American model, the dissuasion represented by fumigation is a 
pre-condition to pressure peasants into undertaking alternative development 
programs. This starting point not only limits alternative programs but also 
generates a war context as a pre-condition for the development of social 
and economic programs.

As a result of this attitude, aerial spraying has seriously affected licit 
alternative programs in the Bota Caucana, Medio and Bajo Cagun, 
reforestation programs in various parts of the Department of Nario, and 
alternative crop programs in the Colombian Pacific Coast. Spraying is not 
compatible with the search for legal alternatives to illicit crops, war 
much less.

QUESTION: Doesn't the spray program hurt the small farmer who has no other 
way of earning a living?

ANSWER: To answer this question, the State Department begins by 
acknowledging that many Colombians are going through a very difficult 
situation, yet this is no reason for them to turn to illegal activities.

The illegal farming sector is for a good part inscribed into the context of 
a survival economy. Part of this economy is in the hands of the big drug 
barons, usually anonymous and absentee large landowners. The other part 
consists of the many small and medium-scale farmers whose coca or poppy 
fields are their only means of support. During the eighties and nineties, 
due to a fall in prices of Colombian export products on the international 
market, and to circumstances peculiar to the internal conflict that 
fostered a new land concentration (a genuine process of agrarian 
counter-reform), rural conditions, which were already bad to begin with, 
deteriorated even more. Floods of peasants displaced by absolute poverty or 
by the ongoing military conflict, and forced to seek economic alternatives, 
found refuge in the production of illicit farming.

Aerial spraying destroys this survival and security web. This was amply 
demonstrated when 240,000 coca farmers took part in protest marches held 
between July and September 1996.

Aerial spraying indiscriminately destroys the few serious attempts to 
provide legal alternatives for coca farmers through alternative development 
programs. Together with coca hectares, their homes, families and legal 
crops are also fumigated. Testimonies abound concerning the physical 
destruction of alternative development projects caused by spraying. Asides 
from the material damage, this policy completely eliminates any possibility 
of reaching a climate of trust and cooperation in the participating 
communities, something that is indispensable for the adequate 
implementation of development programs. This widely illustrates that 
spraying and alternative development strategies are simply incompatible.
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MAP posted-by: Beth