The Columbus Dispatch

Colombian production of cocaine source soars

- By Cesar Garcia

BOGOTA, Colombia — A United Nations report released this past week says that cultivatio­n of the plant used to make cocaine has reached an all-time high in Colombia, adding pressure on President Ivan Duque to resume an aerial spraying program suspended by his predecesso­r over health concerns.

Annual data released by the U.N. indicates Colombian coca cultivatio­n increased 17 percent to 660 square miles in 2017. This could mean cocaine production grew by an estimated 31 percent to 1,379 metric tons.

The findings, based on satellite imagery and onthe-ground verificati­on, track with those of a White House report earlier this year.

Colombia is a top U.S. ally in Latin America, but the boom in coca production has tested relations between the two nations. U.S. President Donald Trump recently threatened to decertify Colombia as a partner in the war on drugs if it failed to reverse course.

Duque, when he took office last month, identified the coca surge as a national security risk. Officials have since said they want to resume aerial spraying of a herbicide that was ended by former President Juan Manuel Santos three years ago amid peace talks with leftist rebels who were heavily involved in the drug trade.

But jump-starting the program will require fighting a constituti­onal court ruling that places strict limits on the use of the herbicide glyphosate. Some drug-policy experts also have questioned the wisdom of bringing back the costly program when drug production has migrated to areas off-limits to spraying, such as national parks.

“Our goal is to show dramatic results in the next four years,” Duque said last week after a meeting with his top military command.

One solution under study by military officials is the use of drones, which fly at a lower altitude, preventing chemicals from drifting and destroying legal crops.

But in the longer term, experts say, there is no substitute for building up state institutio­ns in longneglec­ted rural areas and providing peasant farmers with economical­ly viable legal alternativ­es, even if it is costlier, dangerous and time-consuming.

The bulk of coca production in 2017 was in Colombia’s southern region. Coca cultivatio­n in Narino province alone surpassed 177 square miles, more than the entire amount found in Peru, the world’s second-largest cocaine supplier.

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