Pubdate: Fri, 22 Dec 2006
Source: Christian Science Monitor (US)
Copyright: 2006 The Christian Science Publishing Society
Contact: http://www.csmonitor.com/cgi-bin/contactus.pl
Website: http://www.csmonitor.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/83
Author: Mike Ceaser, Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/coca
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?208 (Environmental Issues)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Colombia
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)

NEW COCA SPAT LEAVES COLOMBIA FLYING SOLO

Ecuador and Venezuela Denounce a Restart to Colombia's US-Backed 
Aerial Fumigation Campaign.

PUNTO ASIS, COLOMBIA - A decision by Colombia's conservative 
President Alvaro Uribe to restart the country's aerial fumigation of 
coca leaf plantations near the border with Ecuador appears to have 
further isolated him in a region increasingly unfriendly to 
Washington's war on drugs.

Last week's move has sparked a diplomatic row, with Ecuador recalling 
its ambassador to Colombia and vowing to file an official complaint 
to both the Organization of American States and the United Nations. 
Ecuador's leftist president-elect Rafael Correa, a close friend of 
Venezuela's anti-American president, Hugo Chavez, has even started 
recruiting other Latin leaders to oppose aerial fumigation.

"It's simply unacceptable that they continue spraying from the air 
with glysophate," Mr. Correa said this week, referring to the 
herbicide used, a more concentrated version of Monsanto's Round-Up. 
"It kills legal crops on the Ecuadorean side and, apparently, also 
kills farmers."

Ecuador has activated its air defense system to monitor the 
fumigation planes, many of which are piloted by Americans. Colombia 
announced it was sending more troops to the 586 kilometer-long 
border, to keep Colombian leftist guerrillas from fleeing into Ecuador.

"There's a risk this could spiral out of control, which would be a 
tremendous setback for what [Mr. Uribe] is trying to accomplish in 
Colombia," says Michael Shifter, an analyst with the Inter-American 
Dialogue in Washington. The Colombia-Ecuador dispute could ruin 
relations between the neighbors and end Ecuador's cooperation with 
the Colombian military, says Mr. Shifter.

Colombia Refusing to Back Down

But Uribe, whose government insists the herbicide is innocuous, has 
shown no willingness to back down. He pointed out that after Colombia 
suspended fumigation along the border a year ago in response to 
Ecuadorean complaints, plantations of coca leaf, the base ingredient 
used to make cocaine, boomed. Uribe described the situation as a 
global security issue.

"The whole world will have to comprehend that Colombia cannot permit 
the FARC to continue filling the area with drugs," he said of the 
border region, where leftist FARC guerrillas are active. "Because, 
with 10,200 hectares [25,205 acres], the FARC is capable of financing 
the destruction of the world."

Whatever the world's opinion, Uribe's Latin neighbors appear to be 
chilling to the US-backed war on coca, which Uribe has embraced 
enthusiastically. Colombia receives more than $700 million from 
Washington - mostly in military aid - each year to fight coca and the 
guerrillas who use it to finance their rebellion.

While Uribe has made progress in reducing Colombia's coca crop, 
neighboring Peru and Bolivia - both of which elected more 
leftward-leaning leaders in the past year - have advocated turning 
coca leaves into legal products, although they say they won't 
tolerate narcotrafficking.

Neighbors Now More Coca-Friendly Then Ever

This week, Bolivian President Evo Morales, who made his name as a 
leader of the country's coca farmers, announced he wanted to expand 
the amount of coca that can be planted for legal uses, such as 
chewing the leaves (a longstanding traditional custom) or using them 
as religious and cultural symbols. Mr. Morales announced this week 
that Bolivia will increase the legal area for planting coca to 49,400 
acres next year from 29,700 acres currently, disregarding limits set 
in a US-sponsored law. He also said that each family will be 
permitted to plant a small plot of coca.

The US ambassador to Bolivia, Philip Golderg, objected, warning that 
drug makers would inevitably purchase the coca leaves. Bolivia is the 
world's No. 3 cocaine producer after Colombia and Peru.

Venezuela's Chavez, who has repeatedly clashed with Washington, met 
with Ecuador's Correa on Wednesday and then called the US war on 
drugs a violation of regional nations' sovereignty.

"The battle against narcotrafficking has been imperialism's excuse 
for penetrating our nations, trampling our people, and having 
military presence in our countries," he said in backing Correa's 
objection to Colombia's renewed aerial spraying.

Even Peruvian President Alan Garcia, who has been friendly to 
Washington on many issues, touted the leaf's nutritional value.

"It can be consumed directly and elegantly in salad," Garcia said, 
adding that a chef had recently served several coca leaf-based dishes 
at the Government Palace.

Correa has also said he opposes the presence of the US military base 
at the Ecuadorean port of Manta - a key support for the US drug war 
in neighboring Colombia.

All of this leaves Uribe - and Washington - increasingly isolated. 
Many Latin Americans have long resented the US drug war, which they 
say forces them to bear the burden of America's vices.

Shifter says that Latin American hostility toward the drug war shows 
"a growing dissatisfaction with a policy that has failed." 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake