Photo: Obinna Anyadike/IRIN. Coca cultivation has retreated to remote regions like Catatumbo in the northeast
Source: IRIN
Analysis: Colombia’s fight against the coca trade By Obinna Anyadike
EL TARRA, 28 August 2013 (IRIN) - The Colombian government believes
people should just say no to growing coca: those that do not, risk
aerial spraying of their illicit crop with powerful pesticides, or
manual destruction by work teams hired by private firms and supported by
the security forces.
Is the strategy paying off in Colombia’s long war against drugs? On the
face of it, yes. Coca cultivation fell by a quarter in 2012, according
to a new crop monitoring survey released by the government and the UN
Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) earlier this month. The area under
coca dropped to 48,000 hectares, down from 64,000 in 2011. Out of 23
provinces growing the crop, only three showed an increase in yields.
The government is aiming to slash production still further in 2013 -
down to 30,000 hectares: vindication of its prosecution of US-backed
Plan Colombia which, 13-years on and approximately US$9 billion later,
has succeeded in banishing the rump of the armed groups profiting from
cocaine to the country’s remotest regions.
While analysts agree the coca crop has shrunk, there are caveats.
Cocaine production and the price of cocaine base and paste has actually
remained fairly stable, which could be due to new super strains
that can produce more cocaine per ton of leaf. In response to the
pressure on upstream production, Mexican cartel representatives are
helping to reorganize the business in Colombia, part of a highly
adaptable and mobile regional narco-trade.
Bo Mathiasen, UNODC’s representative in Colombia, acknowledged
that “cultivation often resumes in new or previously cleared fields”
unless sustained investment in alternative crop strategies are made. He
also notes the armed groups – guerillas and former right-wing
paramilitaries turned mafia - are increasingly moving into the more
lucrative and less policed mineral mining business, which creates a new
set of challenges for the government.
Plan Colombia - more of the same
And, as with every conflict, there is a humanitarian cost.
A key plank of Plan Colombia, and one of the most controversial aspects
of the strategy, is aerial spraying of the herbicide Roundup, developed
by Monsanto. The authorities argue that it is only used in hard-to-reach
areas, and there is no evidence the glyphosate is harmful to humans -
an issue of intense debate in Colombia.
While it might be difficult to prove harmful health effects beyond anecdotal evidence, according to a 2013
study there is a strong correlation between the less-than-accurate
spraying and displacement: fumigation succeeds in driving both coca
growers and legitimate farmers out of an area. Complaints by Venezuela
and Ecuador of the herbicide drifting into their farmers’ fields led to a
ban on spraying in the border regions.
“It does not eradicate, but diffuses coca production, shifting it to
forests of ecological importance and to areas inhabited by low-income,
especially Afro-Colombian and indigenous communities, which as a result
are increasingly displaced,” the study found. The drug war has forced roughly five million people from their homes.
Manual eradication is seen as more effective than crop dusting. Teams of
men on two-month contracts, protected by the police and sniffer dogs,
yank out the patches of coca hidden in the folds of hills or forest
clearings. Private firms recruit from among the rural poor, often the
internally displaced, who may even have been coca growers themselves,
earning a salary of $300.
It is dangerous work. The armed groups controlling coca production mine
and booby-trap the fields. Plastic explosives cannot be detected by the
sniffer dogs, and eradication teams with a quota to fill can take risks.
Lack of private health cover and the administrative nightmare of the
public health and insurance system means it can take ages for those
injured to receive any benefits, according to Mario Alberto Quinones of
the Colombian Campaign Against Landmines.
“They accept the risks, but after accidents the companies fail to give
them all their rights, and sometimes fire them,” he told IRIN. Poverty
means that joining an eradication team “is not a real choice”.
Anger against eradication
Norte de Santander, bordering Venezuela, is one of the provinces that
increased coca production in 2012. The Revolutionary Armed Forces of
Colombia (FARC), the National Liberation Army (ELN) and the smaller
Popular Liberation Army (EPL) dominate coca production here. In June
farmers blockaded roads in the Catatumbo region to keep the eradicators
out, and to demand peasant reserve zones, protected from land grabs and benefitting from credit and rural-development efforts.
The government is in peace talks with the FARC in Havana, after 50-years
of conflict over land reform and social justice. It portrayed the
protest as an effort by FARC to protect their narco-business - a charge
rejected by farmers’ leaders.
There is anger in Catatumbo over the government’s eradication programme.
In a meeting in the mayor’s office in the municipality of El Tarra, a
group of men and women gathered to discuss the issue. They hesitated to
criticize the guerillas, but there was frustration over the central
government’s developmental neglect, the inevitability of the
displacement that would follow coca destruction and the impact on
people’s livelihoods.
One woman, who asked not to be named, said her small shop selling food
and stationery was paying for the private education of her two
daughters. If farmer incomes fell as a result of eradication, what would
happen to her girls, she asked.
Farmers process coca into “base”, adding petrol, cement and fertilizer
to vats of the raw leaves. The resultant brown pulp with a cocaine
content of around 35 percent makes the farmer in Catatumbo around $1,300
per kilo, excluding the cost of the chemicals and labour. “It offers
you more than growing licit crops, but not that much more,” explained
Antonio da Silva of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs.
“The money is just to survive,” one woman at the meeting said. “I don’t
see anyone living large here, I don’t know of anyone who has bought a
car.”
She added that being at the end of a long and pot-holed road through the
Andean mountains makes goods all the more expensive in El Tara.
Blockades, or guerilla attacks on infrastructure, merely increase
everyone’s hardship. “If an electricity pole is destroyed, we pay the
price. All the burdens of the conflict are on the shoulders of the
peasants.”
Crop substitution efforts flawed?
“Zero coca” means farmers must first uproot their crop, but then wait
many months until they are certified coca-free and can get help and
financial support to start new ventures. The group focus of the
programme means that all families in a particular area must collectively
renounce coca, trust the government will pay, absorb the financial
pressure in the interim, and manage the resentment - or offers of aid -
from the armed young men in the community.
“The people are caught between two forces - how do you cope? Sometimes
you just displace yourself [and leave the land],” said Quinones.
The government gasses or smashes coca. But what incentive is there to
prevent farmers returning to cultivation? The drawback to the
government’s alternative crop policy, backed by USAID, is that it has
been “guided more by security rather than development considerations”,
according to analyst Ricardo Vargas
of the Transnational Institute. The idea is to deprive the guerillas of
financing rather than the sustainable development of the communities
and the region.
According to the International Harm Reduction Association:
“It is well recognized that for alternative development programs to
succeed they need to be properly sequenced (alternatives must be in
place before the illicit crops are removed); accompanied by investment
in infrastructure; and supported by trade justice initiatives...
Assistance for alternative development programs should also not be made
conditional on illicit crop reductions.”
USAID’s crop substitution programme includes coffee and cocoa, both
suffering at the moment due to a downturn in global demand. USAID has
also pushed palm oil, now one of the fastest growing sectors of the
Colombian economy. However, according to Flaviano Bianchini of the
environmental NGO Source, the large palm plantations are linked to land evictions and are crowding-out small independent producers.
“You need to identify the production profile of a place, the
agricultural traditions of the zone for there to be effective
alternatives,” the mayor of El Tarra, Jota Mario Arenas, told IRIN. “The
main thing is the municipalities should be part of the design, to
advise. They are the link with the communities and understand them…
Peasants need time and skills training and to be assured that, in the
end, the policy works for them.”
New approaches
The government is re-thinking its approach. In 2011 it introduced the
national Plan for Territorial Consolidation (PTC), which built on an
earlier initiative to tackle both violence and marginalization through a
coordinated strategy. The US State Department has urged more funding
to the PTC, which has been reduced in geographical reach, to “improve
security, increase public service provision, build infrastructure, and
generate additional economic opportunities in regions that have
historically been heavily influenced by terrorist and criminal
elements”.
The human rights NGO the Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA) is critical
of the programme’s failure to achieve its ambitious goals in these
ungoverned areas. “Soldiers are by far the most commonly seen government
representatives, and the civilian parts of the government - such as
health services, education, agriculture, road-builders, land-titlers,
judges, and prosecutors - are lagging very far behind.”
“Consolidation”, according to WOLA, can be seen as the successor to Plan
Colombia – but has been limited by administrative and financial
problems. Success in breaking the cycle of violence is all the more
urgent should the peace talks in Havana succeed and demobilized young
men return to the neglected peripheries.
Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos is regarded as part of a group of Latin American
leaders pushing for new thinking. “The time has come to discuss new
approaches to dealing with the problems of drugs in the Americas,”
Santos wrote in a comment to the UK’s Guardian newspaper. “After four decades of a hard-fought `war on drugs’ the
situation remains - in spite of progress in some areas - terribly and
frustratingly stuck.”