Toronto Star

A side-effect of peace in Colombia? A cocaine boom in the U.S.

Seventeen years after U.S. launched its security package, its closest drug-war ally is covered in more than 180,000 hectares of coca

- NICK MIROFF THE WASHINGTON POST

TUMACO, COLOMBIA— From a military helicopter high above the rolling hills of southern Colombia, the green rows of hearty plants look a bit like the vineyards of California’s Napa Valley. But that’s not zinfandel down there. Bushy fields of illegal coca blanket the countrysid­e, ripe with the raw ingredient­s of the biggest cocaine boom in history.

Seventeen years and $10 billion (U.S.) after the U.S. government launched the counternar­cotics and security package known as Plan Colombia, America’s closest drug-war ally is covered with more than180,000 hectares of coca. Colombian farmers have never grown so much, not even when Pablo Escobar ruled the drug trade.

The peace accord signed last year by the Colombian government and leftist FARC rebels to end their 52-year war committed the guerrillas to quit the narcotics business and help rural families switch to legal crops. But the cash benefits available through the peace deal appear to have created a perverse incentive for farmers to stuff their fields with as many illegal plants as possible. The result is a cocaine market so saturated that prices have crashed and unpicked coca leaves are rotting in the fields, according to Luis Carlos Villegas, Colombia’s defence minister.

“We’ve never seen anything like it before,” Villegas said.

He and other top officials concede that the end of the war with the FARC, or Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia, has made the drug fight more difficult, not less.

“We’ve never seen anything like it before,” LUIS CARLOS VILLEGAS COLOMBIA’S DEFENCE MINISTER

The days when U.S.-funded aircraft could douse coca plantation­s with herbicide are over. A problem that could once be attacked with blunt military force has morphed into a sociologic­al, state-building challenge.

“Frankly, we don’t believe violence is the right instrument to rid Colombia of coca,” Villegas said.

He and other Colombian officials have developed what is arguably the most comprehens­ive, wellresear­ched anti-narcotics strategy ever attempted, offering cash incentives for entire communitie­s to switch to alternativ­e crops, while sending eradicatio­n crews to rip up the plants of those who refuse.

But the government says its strategy needs more time to succeed. U.S. lawmakers are growing impatient. Colombia produced a whopping 710 metric tons of cocaine last year, according to U.S. government estimates, up from 235 metric tons in 2013.

When Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos travels to Washington to meet with President Donald Trump on Thursday, his country’s coca binge will likely be a sore point. Trump has cited drug smuggling as a growing national security threat and a justificat­ion for a wall along the U.S. southern border.

At a time when much of America’s drug fight has shifted to the opioid abuse crisis, U.S. cocaine use is soaring. American officials say the flood of cheap Colombian product is so large that it’s quietly created its own demand.

U.S. cocaine overdose deaths are at a 10-year high, and between 2013 and 2015, the number of young Americans who said they used cocaine for the first time increased 61 per cent, according to the latest report by the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administra­tion.

“What is happening is the counter-argument to the suggestion that demand always drives supply,” said William Brownfield, the State Department’s top antinarcot­ics official. “In this case, any rational observer would say the supply of the product right now is dramatical­ly greater than the demand.”

The FARC funded its half-century insurgency partly on drug profits. It taxed coca growers and trafficker­s, or sold cocaine directly to the Mexican cartels that control access to the world’s biggest drug market, the United States.

But with the vast majority of the FARC’s 7,000 fighters ready to lay down their weapons, the guerrilla group has essentiall­y gotten out of the drug trade, top U.S. and Colombian officials say.

The FARC’s demobiliza­tion has set off a deadly scramble for control of Colombia’s multibilli­on-dol- lar cocaine business, pitting traffickin­g gangs against one another and the country’s smaller communist rebel group, the ELN, or the National Liberation Army.

Under the terms of Colombia’s peace accord, the FARC has pledged to work with coca farmers in the remote communitie­s long under its control, helping them plant alternativ­e cash crops such as coffee, bananas and cacao. But it’s likely to be at least several months before ex-combatants are ready to join those programs.

In the meantime, the Colombian government insists it is fighting the coca boom on all fronts. Colombian security agencies that work closely with the U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Agency are seizing record amounts of cocaine — 115 metric tons through the first four months of 2017.

Getting farmers to stop growing so much coca may be a bigger challenge. Colombian officials have begun showing up in their communitie­s with cash payments for farmers who voluntaril­y pull up their coca and enter a two-year program to transition to legal crops.

Areas that faithfully comply will receive technical and commercial support, and funding for public works such as roads, clinics and athletic fields.

The catch? The entire community has to be coca-free in order for families to get their monthly payments. Experts say this sort of peer-pressure method is the only one that works, because if there’s coca around, the traffickin­g gangs will never leave.

Bo Mathiasen, who leads the UN Office on Drugs and Crime in Colombia, said the government has a narrow window of opportunit­y to prevent new armed groups from muscling into areas where the FARC has withdrawn.

“The challenge is for the state to have a permanent presence in rural areas,” Mathiasen said.

The government will pay families up to $16,000 (Canadian) over a two-year period, a considerab­le sum in rural Colombia calculated to be at least as remunerati­ve as growing coca. But enthusiasm for the program also presents a threat to its suc- cess. In areas where some farmers grow coca, but others do not, the program will make payments to every household, to avoid sowing jealousy or creating the appearance of a reward for criminal behaviour.

But it may be too late to avoid that impression. For the first time, Colombia’s peace accord has formally recognized growing coca as a rational response by farmers to poverty and a weak government presence. That has had the subtle, inadverten­t effect of shifting responsibl­y for eliminatin­g coca from the farmers to the government.

Rural communitie­s know the best way to get the government’s attention and ensure it follows through on promises is to have coca in the ground, so they are planting more and more in anticipati­on of qualifying for official payments.

The government says it can eliminate more than 48,000 hectares of coca this year through the voluntary program. But if the estimated 70,000 families sign up — and many more may be eager to do so — the cost will exceed $685 million a year. With public funds squeezed by slowing growth, it’s unclear how authoritie­s will be able to afford an oversubscr­ibed crop substituti­on program. If farmers don’t get the official payments, they are likely to keep planting coca.

Eduardo Diaz, who heads the crop substituti­on program, says an expensive plan is still better than continuing the drug war. The government stopped aerial spraying of coca in 2015, amid fears of elevated cancer risk. U.S. officials believe the tactic should remain part of the overall strategy, but Colombia’s highest court last month essentiall­y formalized the ban.

The problem is too big for weed killer anyway, said Kevin Whitaker, the U.S. ambassador to Colombia. “Even if we had the same number of planes we had before, spraying at the same pace as before, it would take a couple years to turn that curve,” he said.

Colombian authoritie­s say they will hold the line this year by using more forceful methods in places such as Tumaco, where they say criminal gangs, not humble peasants, are mounting “industrial-scale” coca operations. Those farms are too big to be eligible for crop substituti­on programs.

Local growers are resisting the government anyway, sending women and children to block roads, encircle eradicatio­n crews or worse. A police officer in Tumaco was shot dead at a roadblock in March, and 12 others were captured and held captive by an angry mob last month.

On a recent morning, the head of Colombia’s anti-narcotics police, Maj. Gen. Jose Mendoza, invited a group of reporters to see the eradicatio­n work and the scale of the new coca fields. Riot cops with pepper spray and body armour were sent to protect them.

The Blackhawk helicopter­s took off over the Pacific, banked south and flew over vast palm oil plantation­s. Soon the coca fields appeared, right up the border with Ecuador. Mendoza and his troops scattered leaflets into the air, each one printed to resemble high-denominati­on peso bank notes. On the flip side was a cash offer for confidenti­al informatio­n leading to drug busts.

It was too dangerous to land on the farms, the commanders said, so the helicopter­s flew in a sweeping arc over miles and miles of coca. After a while, one of the general’s crews appeared below, hacking at the plants with machetes in the hot sun. From above, they looked like tiny black specks in a great green sea.

 ?? FERNANDO VERGARA PHOTOS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Coca pickers carry harvested leaves along a field in Puerto Bello in Colombia. The government claims it can eliminate 48,000 hectares of coca through a crop-substituti­on program.
FERNANDO VERGARA PHOTOS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Coca pickers carry harvested leaves along a field in Puerto Bello in Colombia. The government claims it can eliminate 48,000 hectares of coca through a crop-substituti­on program.
 ??  ?? A picker holds a bunch of coca leaves.
A picker holds a bunch of coca leaves.

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