Kuwait Times

Colombia ‘drug triangle’ puts hope in chocolate

-

GUERIMA: Isidro Montiel arrived in Colombia’s lawless “drug triangle” in 1982 hoping to get rich farming coca, the raw ingredient for cocaine. Today, with the country perched at the edge of a new era, he is betting instead on cacao, the little brown seeds used to make chocolate. “I had heard that planting coca was a good living,” Montiel, a stout 57-year-old farmer, said of his decision 35 years ago to move to the remote triangle of jungle between the villages of Guerima, Chupave and Puerto Principe, in the eastern department of Vichada.

Back then, notorious drug lord Carlos Lehder was building clandestin­e airstrips across this territory, which is roughly the size of Iceland, to fly cocaine to the United States. Demand in the US was booming, and “a huge amount of cocaine was being shipped by air,” said Colombian air force commander Jean Paul Strong, who heads a special task force in the region. Word quickly spread around Colombia that Lehder-the co-founder of the Medellin Cartel, along with Pablo Escobar needed workers to build this cocaine empire.

But soon after Montiel arrived, the situation took a dramatic twist. Escobar tipped off authoritie­s to Lehder’s whereabout­s, leading to his arrest and extraditio­n to the United States in 1987. That left a power vacuum in the triangle that was soon filled by the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, a Marxist guerrilla group at war with the government since 1964. The FARC imposed a “tax” on coca paste, the substance produced by farmers like Montiel. Taking a cut of the lucrative drug trade quickly became one of the rebels’ main funding sources, along with ransom kidnapping­s.

Drugs and violence

In Colombia, the world’s top cocaine producer, that nexus between leftist rebels and drug trafficker­s has fueled a half-century conflict that has killed more than 260,000 people and left 60,000 missing. It also translated into a bleak reality for farmers like Montiel. “It was humiliatin­g. It was either pay up or pay up-no alternativ­e. It’s not right, having to work and then give away your product,” said Montiel. He said the FARC used to extort more than 30 percent of the $760 he made on each kilo of coca paste. But then history shifted beneath his feet again.

In 2012, the FARC entered peace talks with the government, eventually signing a historic peace deal that saw the rebels begin laying down their arms this week. That same year, Montiel signed up for a new government program to encourage coca farmers to switch to legal crops. It subsidizes cacao farming, and also gives producers direct deals with chocolate manufactur­ers so they can sell at the market price-no middleman to take a cut. — AFP

 ??  ?? GUERIMA, Colombia: Children sit on sacks of cocoa beans set to be loaded onto a Colombian Air Force plane at the Guerima village airstrip in the municipali­ty of Cumaribo. — AFP
GUERIMA, Colombia: Children sit on sacks of cocoa beans set to be loaded onto a Colombian Air Force plane at the Guerima village airstrip in the municipali­ty of Cumaribo. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait