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The helicopter swooped by a couple hundred
yards away, just above the trees, as we were traveling to the community of
Malvinas on June 12. We stopped at a house alongside the road and heard
more helicopters. We then saw the two planes that were spraying herbicide
in the U.S.-financed “war on drugs.”
One of the planes flew directly overhead - in
the photo you can see the tubing attached to the wing that is used for the
fumigation. The plane was escorted by two helicopters which each had
machine guns pointing out of both doors.
Peasant and human rights organizations have
repeatedly denounced that the fumigations damage food crops and human
health. On June 25 and 26, I traveled with representatives of the Joel
Sierra Human Rights Foundation to visit farms that had been fumigated in the municipality
of Arauquita.
Luis Alfonso and Amilia have four children and
live in a small, dirt-floored, house alongside their field of corn and
yuca. They don’t have any coca (the raw material used to manufacture
cocaine) but their farm was still fumigated on June 10. The plants have
withered and will not produce any harvest (see photo). Luis
Alfonso borrowed money to plant the crops, and now he won’t be able to pay that
money back nor does he know how he’ll be able to provide for the family.
The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
(UNODC) detected approximately 6,700
acres of coca here in the state of Arauca in 2001 (the peak year, according to their
figures). Between 2003 and 2007, nearly 60,000
acres were fumigated in the state during five rounds of
spraying. The amount of coca detected by the UNODC in Arauca at the end of 2007 was 5,300
acres – the largest amount since 2001.
While the policy of massive aerial fumigation
has failed to reduce coca cultivation in Colombia, it has generated
substantial income for several U.S.
corporations:
1. DynCorp, a corporation of retired soldiers and soldiers-for-hire,
has the State Department contract for drug eradication and interdiction in Colombia, Bolivia, Peru and Pakistan – with the primary
focus being the aerial fumigations in Colombia.
DynCorp receives $174 million per year for that contract.
2. United Technologies manufactures Black Hawk helicopters and received
$234 million for the eighteen Black Hawks given to Colombia as part of Plan Colombia - a huge increase
in U.S.
military aid pushed through Congress by Bill Clinton in 2000 using the
justification of the “war on drugs.”
3. Textron manufactures Huey helicopters and received $81 million for
the forty two Hueys given to Colombia as part of Plan Colombia.
4. Monsanto manufactures the herbicide glyphosate (Roundup) that has
been used to fumigate more than 2.5 million acres in Colombia
during the last eight years.
According to peasant and human rights
organizations in Arauca,
the fumigations also benefit the oil corporations by causing people to abandon
the rural areas where oil exploration is occurring. Occidental Petroleum
(a U.S.
corporation), Repsol (a Spanish corporation), and Ecopetrol (a corporation
primarily owned by the Colombian government) are currently exploring several
new oilfields in Arauca.
The peasant organizations in Arauca are calling on the government to halt
the fumigations. The peasants have expressed their willingness to
manually eradicate the coca in exchange for assistance with alternative crops
and marketing that would enable them to provide for their families. In the
last two weeks, some of the peasants have already started eradicating even
though the government has not agreed to the proposal.
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