Pubdate: Sun, 24 Mar 2002
Source: Reuters (Wire)
Copyright: 2002 Reuters Limited
Author: Adam Entous

U.S. WANTS TO RESTART DRUG FLIGHTS OVER PERU

SAN SALVADOR - The Bush administration said on Sunday it hoped to quickly 
resume a U.S.-backed drug surveillance program over Peru that was suspended 
a year ago after a Peruvian jet shot down a civilian airplane, killing an 
American missionary and her baby.

"We want to restart these air interdiction flights. Let there be no doubt 
about that," Secretary of State Colin Powell (news - web sites) told 
reporters aboard Air Force One on President Bush (news - web sites)'s 
flight from Lima, Peru to San Salvador (news - web sites).

"And I expect that we will finish the various review elements ... in the 
near term. I don't expect this to linger too much longer," Powell added.

The surveillance flights were suspended after a Peruvian military jet shot 
down a civilian float plane in April 2001, mistakenly suspecting it was 
involved in drug trafficking. A U.S. surveillance flight had drawn the 
attention of the Peruvians to the plane, which was carrying a group of 
missionaries.

"It was an accident," Toledo said in an interview with Fox News Sunday. "We 
share responsibility on the part of the pilots of the plane as well as our 
armed forces." He said Peru was attempting to reach a settlement with 
family members.

"Nothing would substitute, of course, for the loss of lives. However, we 
still have the issue of narco trafficking and so the surveillance planes 
are vital," Toledo told the network.

"I am very hopeful and optimistic that very soon we'll once again have that 
collaboration to identity sooner and effectively those who narco traffic in 
the jungles of Peru," Toledo told Fox.

Toledo told the network he had a "hunch" that the flights would be resumed 
this year, hopefully before August.

Powell also said Bush, during a closed-door meeting in Lima on Saturday 
with Peruvian President Alejandro Toledo, brought up the case of Lori 
Berenson (news - web sites), an American woman convicted of aiding Marxist 
rebels.

Powell said Bush did not ask Toledo directly to pardon Berenson, saying the 
United States would await the outcome of a review by a human rights commission.

In February, Peru's top appeals court upheld Berenson's 20-year sentence on 
terrorism charges, exhausting all her legal options in Peru.

At the time, Berenson's father said he would petition Bush to apply an 
article of the U.S. penal code to "come to the rescue of any Americans 
wrongfully held in a foreign country."

Berenson was arrested in late 1995 and jailed for life by a military panel 
as a leader of the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement (MRTA).

Her conviction was overturned in 2000 and a civil retrial ordered. That 
court convicted her last June of helping MRTA rebels with whom she lived 
plot an attack on Congress. The court sentenced her to 20 years, meaning 
that with time served, she would be jailed until two weeks after her 46th 
birthday.

Berenson's only options now are to take her case to the Washington-based 
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, which can refer it to the 
region's top rights court, to hope for a pardon from Toledo or to ask to 
serve her sentence in a U.S. jail.

"The president brought it up directly with President Toledo. And we took 
note of the fact that the second trial by our standards followed the kind 
of due process we'd like to see," Powell said.

He said the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights was reviewing the case.

"And when they have completed their review and made their decisions known, 
perhaps that may offer an opportunity for President Toledo to examine the 
whole case and take another look at what might be possible."

Asked if Bush appealed for a pardon, Powell said: "He did not make a direct 
appeal. That wouldn't have been appropriate, because we are now waiting for 
the results of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights."
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