Skip to main content
BBC NEWS / AMERICAS
Graphics VersionBBC Sport Home
News Front Page | Africa | Americas | Asia-Pacific | Europe | Middle East | South Asia | UK | Business | Health | Science & Environment | Technology | Entertainment | Also in the news | Have Your Say |
Saturday, 15 April 2006, 21:13 GMT 22:13 UK

Coca-growing spreads in Colombia

Soldiers pull up coca plants Coca production in Colombia is more widespread than previously registered, the US government says.

A survey found efforts to kill the crop - the source for cocaine - by spraying fields with chemicals had succeeded.

But the US government, expanding the survey area, found an extra 26% of land under cultivation. It also found production was more dispersed.

Correspondents say this is a setback for the US. It has spent $4bn fighting Colombia's cocaine trade since 2000.

The BBC's Jeremy McDermott in Colombia says US policy appears to be failing, with cocaine yields improving, demand in the US remaining steady, and a more liberal approach to coca cultivation in Bolivia and Peru.

'Spraying works'

However the head of the US Office of National Drug Control Policy, John Walters, insisted it was working.

His office said the increase in land discovered to be under cultivation came about because the survey area had been increased, in an attempt to improve its comprehensiveness.

It found:

"Where there was no spraying cultivation was up, where spraying is occurring, cultivation is shrinking," Mr Walters said.

In some areas, farmers had moved production to more remote and difficult plots, the report said.

Critics of US policy said it was just forcing poor farmers to look for new areas to grow their produce.

"Coca production was not going to be reduced just because fumigation flights spray some fields, as long as these farmers don't have any other economic options, except to cut down forests to grow coca somewhere else," said Adam Isacson of the Washington-based Center for International Policy.

Civil war

Colombia is the world's biggest producer of cocaine, and has attracted billions of dollars of US funds as Washington tries to cut the supply of the drug to American users.

However the US has found that production is also increasing in Peru and Bolivia.

Mr Walters said the joint US-Colombian coca eradication plan would continue.

He said it was also helping stabilise Colombia, where a civil war, funded by cocaine profits, has raged for decades.

"The terrorist groups are weaker... they are receiving less money, murders are down, kidnappings are down," he said.



E-mail this to a friend

RELATED INTERNET LINKS:
US Office of National Drug Control Policy
Colombian government
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites



SEARCH BBC NEWS: 

News Front Page | Africa | Americas | Asia-Pacific | Europe | Middle East | South Asia | UK | Business | Health | Science & Environment | Technology | Entertainment | Also in the news | Have Your Say |

NewsWatch | Notes | Contact us | About BBC News | Profiles | History

^ Back to top | BBC Sport Home | BBC Homepage | Contact us | Help | ©