Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted July 14, 2024 Diamond Member Share Posted July 14, 2024 This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Colombia Faces a New Problem: Too Much ******** For decades, one industry has sustained the small, remote Colombian village of Caño Cabra: ********. Those who live in this community in the central part of the country rise early nearly every morning to pick coca leaf, scraping brittle branches, sometimes until their hands bleed. Later, they mix the leaves with gasoline and other chemicals to make chalky white bricks of coca paste. But two years ago, the villagers said, something alarming happened: The ***** traffickers who buy the coca paste and turn it into ******** stopped showing up. Suddenly, people who were already poor had no income. Food became scarce. An exodus to other parts of Colombia in search of jobs followed. The town of 200 people shrunk to 40. The same pattern was repeated again and again in communities across the country where coca is the only source of income. Colombia, the global nexus of the ******** industry, where Pablo Escobar became the world’s best known *********, and which still produces more of the ***** than any other nation, is facing tectonic shifts as a result of domestic and global forces that are reshaping the ***** industry. The changing dynamics have led to blocks of unsold coca paste piling up across Colombia. The purchase of the paste in more than half of the country’s coca-growing regions has dropped precipitously or disappeared completely, spurring a humanitarian crisis in many remote, impoverished communities. The ***** market had never seen “such a dramatic downturn,” said Felipe Tascón, an economist who has studied the illicit ***** economy and had directed a national government program to help move coca farmers to legal crops. The upending of the ******** industry is, in part, an unintended consequence of a landmark peace deal eight years ago with the country’s largest armed group, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, that ended one phase of a conflict that has lasted decades. The leftist group financed its war largely through ******** and relied on thousands of farmers to provide the bright green coca plant — the *****’s main ingredient. But once the FARC exited the ******** industry, it was replaced by smaller ********* groups pursuing a new economic model, said Leonardo Correa of the ******* Nations Office on Drugs and ******: buying large quantities of coca from a smaller number of farmers and limiting their operations to border regions where it is easier to move drugs out of the country. That means towns like Caño Cabra, deep in the country’s interior, about 165 miles southeast of Bogotá, the capital, have seen their sole business largely vanish. “It’s been difficult,” said Yamile Hernandez, 42, a coca farmer and mother of two teenagers who has struggled to put food on the table. “I don’t know what will happen.” At the same time, other countries have become important competitors and have contributed to changes in Colombia’s ***** market. Ecuador has emerged as a top ******** exporter, while cultivation of coca leaf has increased in Peru and Central America. That has helped push global ******** production higher than it has ever been. And while ******** consumption has flattened in the ******* States, it is growing in Europe and ****** America and emerging in other regions, like Asia. In Colombia, government policies, including a move away from eradicating coca plants, and technological advances in cultivation, have allowed coca production to expand despite decades of investment by the ******* States to try to dismantle the ******** industry. Annual production of the coca leaf and ******** hit new highs in 2022, with the manufacturing of the ***** This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up from the previous year, according to the most recent data available from the ******* Nations. “We’re seeing production at levels that Pablo Escobar dreamed about,” said a U.S. official who has worked for years on ***** interdiction in Colombia and asked not to be identified because he was not authorized to speak on the record. “You go to coca fields,” he added, “and it’s like standing in a cornfield in Iowa — you can’t see the end.” The ***** in ******** production has led to a jump in exports. ******** export revenues rose to $18.2 billion in 2022 from $12.4 billion in 2021, according to an analysis by Bloomberg Economics, which predicted that they would This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , the country’s top export, as soon as this year. Colombia’s president, Gustavo Petro, has focused on targeting ***** trafficking networks and a shift away from eradicating the coca leaf has helped feed the surge in ******** production, according to U.N. and U.S. officials. “With Petro’s disinterest in forced eradication, there are effectively no barriers to entry into the coca field,” said Kevin Whitaker, a former U.S. ambassador to Colombia and a nonresident fellow at the Atlantic Council. Gloria Miranda, who now directs the government’s coca substitution program, disputed this claim, noting that ***** seizures had This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up during Mr. Petro’s nearly two years in office. Critics say that is largely because so much more ******** is being produced. New fertilizers have also helped make it easier to grow more coca, even as many Colombian armed groups contributing to the country’s continuing conflict are relying far less on drugs for income and turning to other illicit activities that do not draw as much scrutiny from law enforcement, like gold mining, logging and the smuggling of migrants, according to several analysts. So while ******** ******** an enormous moneymaking enterprise for ********* networks in Colombia, the new economic model has brought suffering to many parts of the country. At least 55 percent of coca-growing regions in Colombia have seen coca sales plummet, Mr. Correa said. Like many rural communities, Caño Cabra has no government presence and is controlled by an ******** armed group. There is no electricity, no running water and no public school. Ms. Hernandez has struggled to come up with the money to send her two children to boarding school in a nearby town so that they will not have to work full time in the coca fields like she did growing up. The teenagers, Valentina, 16, and Manuel, 14, did work in the fields while on break from school — not for the pay, which was negligible, but for the free breakfast served by the coca farm’s owner. Meat, a staple of the Colombian diet, has become scarce. “All of us haven’t eaten meat for a long time because there is nowhere to buy it, and there is nothing to buy it with,” Ms. Hernandez said. The economic pain afflicting many coca-growing regions is pushing out many people. María Manrrique owned a pharmacy in the town of Nueva Colombia, near Caño Cabra, but as coca sales evaporated, customers started pleading that they had no money for medication. So last year, she moved to the nearest city, San José del Guaviare. The adjustment was hard. She missed her hometown and the open vistas of the countryside. She felt claustrophobic and lonely. But she started seeing a therapist for depression and making a living selling empanadas. Ms. Manrrique said she had no plans to leave. In the city, she has better access to insulin for her diabetes, and her young son is getting a better education. “People are emigrating, and it makes you feel bad because it used to be a good town of good people,” she said. But she added, “I’ve already taken this step, and I’m not going back.” While some experts say the transformation of the ******** industry could lead coca plant growers to transition to legal ways of making a living, many worry that farmers could instead switch to other illicit activities. Jefferson Parrado, 39, the president of the local council that presides over the region that includes Caño Cabra, said many might switch to raising cattle — one of the world’s biggest drivers of deforestation. Other residents said that they might join armed groups out of economic desperation. “Several regions have achieved economic development thanks to the coca and ******** market,” said Diego Garcia-Devis, who manages the ***** policy program at the Open Society Foundations. “What income will replace coca income? Another ******** income? Mining, trafficking of humans, wildlife, timber? Extortion?” In many remote areas of Colombia, it is not economically viable to sell other crops because of high transportation costs. By the time produce arrived at market, it would rot, residents said. For many Colombians, the ******** industry has been their only option. “It does harm to humanity, and we are aware of that,” Mr. Parrado said. “But for us, it means health, it means education, it means the sustenance of the families in the regions.” This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up #Colombia #Faces #Problem #******** This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up For verified travel tips and real support, visit: https://hopzone.eu/ 0 Quote Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/65603-colombia-faces-a-new-problem-too-much-cocaine/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.