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September 3, 2006
Waging War in Colombia’s National Parks
by Garry Leech
Cecilia walked around her small wooden house pointing to the banana
trees and yucca plants that were killed by the aerial fumigation
that had occurred eight days earlier. She described how the chemicals
blanketed not only the coca crops she and her husband cultivate
in order to survive, but also their food crops and two young children.
As a result, the family is now struggling to survive in a part of
Colombia that has been Cecilia’s home for her entire life:
the Macarena National Park. Based on the results of the initial
fumigations, it appears that Colombian President Alvaro Uribe’s
decision to begin spraying coca crops in the country’s national
parks will only intensify the conflict, escalate the humanitarian
crisis and increase ecological damage in some of Colombia’s
most pristine environments.
The Macarena National Park is situated east of the Andes Mountains
in the department of Meta where the wide-open plains of the north,
known as Los Llanos, meet the Amazon Rainforest to the south. The
park itself is a spectacular mountainous outcropping covered in
lush rainforest and filled with rivers and canyons, much of which
is only accessible to the hardiest of travelers. In 1989, the Colombian
government finally designated this natural wonder a national park,
while UNESCO declared it a “heritage of humanity” site.
While the interior of the park is mostly uninhabited, several thousand
peasants who colonized the region in the 30 years prior to the creation
of the park continue to live within its confines—a common
practice in Colombia’s national parks. The original settlers
were peasants fleeing government repression in the 1950s and early
1960s, during the period known as La Violencia. The self-defense
movements formed by the displaced peasants, in order to protect
their lands and families from the Colombian army, eventually became
the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) in 1966. And now,
40 years later, FARC guerrillas still control the Macarena National
Park and its surrounding environs.
It is impossible to accurately describe life in the Macarena without
discussing the role of the FARC. Not only because the guerrillas
profit from the cultivation of coca—a fact repeatedly emphasized
by the U.S. and Colombian governments—but also because they
are so organically linked to the local peasant population—a
fact that the same governments choose to ignore. The conditions
that caused peasants to colonize the Colombian Amazon and form the
FARC almost a half-century ago still exist in the Macarena today.
It is an area that has been grossly neglected by the state in every
conceivable manner but one: military repression. The only national
government presence in the region has consisted of aerial bombings,
short-lived military offensives and now aerial fumigations.
Over the past 50 years, with no support from the national government,
the local peasant population has carved a network of primitive dirt
roads throughout the rainforest that are only traversable in four-wheel
drive vehicles. They have constructed electrical grids powered by
gasoline generators for their villages and small towns. And it is
the FARC that has become their government, providing such public
services as security, social aid and a justice system among other
things.
From left to
right: Cloud covered rainforest in the foothills of the Serrania
de La Macarena; a
small town in the FARC-controlled region; a dirt road in the Macarena.
(Photos: Garry Leech)
Unlike in some other regions of Colombia where the FARC—and
the military and right-wing paramilitaries—impose their rule
on local populations, the guerrillas in the Macarena are clearly
a government “of the people.” Many households in the
region have at least one family member in the FARC and the local
population interacts with the rebels as naturally and comfortably
as rural citizens in the global North do with their local government
officials and law enforcement officers. As one peasant explains,
“When someone has a problem with another person, perhaps a
fight or something, they can take their complaint to the FARC. The
FARC then investigates and determines who is at fault and what the
sentence will be.” He goes on to point out that there are
no prisons under the rebels, that the sentences handed down to guilty
parties include repairing the roads or working in the fields of
communal farms.
For the most part, peasants have managed to survive in the Macarena
region through subsistence farming, including raising cows, pigs
and chickens, and growing various food crops such as bananas, yucca,
papaya and avocados. It was only 20 years ago that small-scale coca
cultivation entered the mix in order to allow peasant families to
compensate for the lack of infrastructure, which prevented them
from being able to transport their food crops to distant markets.
It is only during the past five years, however, that the coca plant
has become the most prominent crop in the Macarena region. Farmers
grow the coca plants, harvest the leaves and process them into coca
paste for sale to drug traffickers, who then process the paste into
cocaine. The FARC profits from coca cultivation in the Macarena
by taking a cut of all drug transactions in the region.
The recent escalation in coca cultivation in the Macarena has coincided
with the implementation of the U.S.-backed Plan Colombia, whose
targeting of coca crops in southern Colombia has led to a disbursement
of coca cultivation throughout the country. In order to respond
to this shift in cultivation patterns, U.S counternarcotics officials
began urging President Uribe to approve aerial fumigations of Colombia’s
national parks, which had remained exempt from spraying operations.
Instead of authorizing aerial fumigations, Uribe announced an alternative
plan in December 2005 to send 1,000 manual eradicators under the
protection of 3,500 troops to the Macarena National Park. In the
ensuing months, more than a dozen military personnel were killed
in rebel attacks. In response, the military launched aerial bombardments
against FARC positions in the park. The hardship of life in the
remotely located park and repeated FARC attacks against the eradication
operation eventually caused many of the eradicators to quit and
return to their homes outside the region. Finally, after the deaths
of six eradicators on August 2, Uribe gave the order to begin aerial
fumigations of coca crops in Macarena National Park.
Within days, U.S.-supplied spray planes and helicopter gunships
began fumigation operations in the coca growing areas of the park,
spraying a chemical concoction that has never been approved for
use in the United States: the herbicide glyphosate mixed with the
surfactant Cosmo Flux 411-F and other additives. After a week of
spraying, Colombia’s anti-narcotics police claimed to have
destroyed all 11,370 acres of coca in the park.

From left to
right: Acres of fumigated land in the Macarena region; small trees
and bushes killed by the aerial fumigation. (Photos: Garry Leech)
It soon became apparent that the Colombian government had exaggerated
the success of the aerial fumigation operation; at least in the
section of the park visited by this writer eight days after the
spraying had ended. While most of the coca had been sprayed, approximately
20 percent remained untouched. Additionally, peasants had saved
some of the fumigated coca crops by cutting the tops off the plants
before the chemicals could destroy the roots. As a result, these
plants will continue to produce five harvests of coca leaves annually.
Meanwhile, the spraying also killed many small trees and bushes
in the rainforest perimeter around the coca fields.
While fast-acting peasants can save their coca crops by cutting
them at the stem, the same process is ineffective on less-hardy
food crops such as banana, papaya and avocado trees, and smaller
plants including yucca. Nearly all of the coca in the Macarena region
is cultivated by local peasants on small farms of 12 acres or less.
The money these farmers earn from their coca crops allows them to
supplement the food that they grow with other necessities. Consequently,
because the cultivation of coca does not provide them with much
disposable income, the destruction of food crops has caused a major
food crisis for many households.

From left to
right: Aerial fumigation killed this banana tree in close proximity
to
a peasant family’s home in the Macarena; sprayed bananas on
the same
tree; a papaya tree killed by the fumigation. (Photo: Garry Leech)
Additionally, many family members and hired coca pickers were present
on the farms when the spraying indiscriminately targeted homes situated
in the midst of food and coca crops. As a result, many children
and coca pickers, who earn approximately $10 a day harvesting coca,
were sprayed with chemicals that caused them to suffer from various
gastrointestinal problems. Cecilia described how her two children
both began vomiting shortly after the spraying and then suffered
from diarrhea for several days.
Children also suffered psychological trauma from the militaristic
nature of the fumigation operation. Helicopter gunships swooped
down low over farms only minutes ahead of the spray planes to unleash
barrages of machine gun fire around the perimeter of coca fields.
The earth is pockmarked with holes created by bullets from the machine
guns while hundreds of shell casings litter the ground, often dangerously
close to homes.

From left to
right: The top of a sprayed coca plant has been removed to prevent
the
chemicals from killing the roots; shell casings from helicopter-mounted
machine guns
and M-16 rifles lie on the ground near the home of a peasant family;
coca crops
that escaped the aerial fumigations in the Macarena. (Photos: Garry
Leech)
The U.S. and Colombian governments claim that destroying coca crops
in the FARC-controlled Macarena will diminish the funding that the
rebel group receives from the illegal drug trade, thereby weakening
it militarily. Colombia’s Defense Minister Camilo Ospina explained
the military objective of the coca eradication campaign, “We
cannot pretend that eliminating the checkbook of the guerrillas
will be an easy process. The process in La Macarena consists of
the eradication of coca in one of the zones of the world with the
greatest levels of cultivation, which represents the most important
source of financing for subversive groups, specifically the FARC.”
For its part, the Bush administration expressed its satisfaction
with President Uribe’s response to its repeated requests that
spray planes be deployed to Colombia’s national parks. James
O’Gara of the White House’s Office of National Drug
Control Policy declared, “If the FARC thought the government
would allow coca to grow untrammeled in its national parks, they’ve
obviously miscalculated.” But according to a local FARC commander,
“The fumigations hurt the peasants more than the guerrillas.
They are the ones who are most dependent on coca for their survival.”
While the fumigations are probably affecting the FARC’s finances
to some degree, more than six years of Plan Colombia has provided
little evidence that this strategy is noticeably weakening the rebel
group’s military capacity. If anything, such tactics are only
further entrenching popular support for the guerrillas in remote
regions of the country such as the Macarena.
In addition to Plan Colombia’s counternarcotics operations,
the Colombian military has also been implementing the U.S.-backed
Plan Patriota, a large-scale counterinsurgency operation intended
to seize control of FARC-controlled areas in southern and eastern
Colombia, including the Macarena region. But Plan Patriota has proved
ineffective, often only consisting of sporadic ground offensives
into FARC-controlled areas. According to peasants in the Macarena
region, the army often kills civilians during these incursions and
then publicly blames the FARC—accusations that are then dutifully
reported by the national and international media without any investigation
into the crimes.
There have also been several incidents under Plan Patriota of peasants
in the Macarena region being arbitrarily arrested by Colombian troops
and taken to the army base in Vista Hermosa, located on the side
of the Guapaya River controlled by the state. In one incident that
occurred in January 2006, the army rounded up eight peasants and
took them to the military base. Officials claim that all of those
detained were later released although only one of them has since
been seen. The other seven were likely “disappeared”
by right-wing paramilitaries who, according to several residents
in Vista Hermosa, are still active in the area despite their supposed
demobilization.
The situation for the peasants living in the Macarena has changed
little since they settled the region some 50 years ago. To this
day, the policies of the national government in Bogotá have
only consisted of military operations that have often resulted in
gross violations of human rights. Under Uribe’s Plan Patriota,
there has been no attempt to provide peasants who have traditionally
lived in rebel-controlled regions with any social or economic programs
in order to win the battle for the “hearts and minds”
of the local population. The extent of this failure was clearly
explained to a U.S. congressional committee in June 2004 by Adam
Isacson, long-time Colombia analyst for the Washington-based Center
for International Policy:
| The last several years in Colombia are full of stories of
supposedly successful military offensives. The pattern is familiar:
thousands of troops rush into a guerrilla stronghold, the guerrillas
offer minimal resistance and retreat into the jungle. The troops
stay a few weeks, or even months, but the Colombian government
doesn’t commit any resources to bringing the rest of the
government into the zone. They can’t stay forever—and
since they operate with virtual impunity, that’s not always
bad news for the civilians in the zone. When the military eventually
has to go back to its bases, though, we find that no moves have
been made to bring in judges, cops, teachers, doctors, road-builders,
or any of the other civilian government services that every
society and economy needs in order to function. |
The Macarena region is a perfect example of the process described
by Isacson. However, this has not only been the story over the last
several years, but over the past half-century. With the complete
failure of the government to even attempt to provide any basic services
to the local population, it is the FARC that has filled the void
by helping to build roads and provide electricity, law enforcement,
judges and other public services traditionally supplied by the state.
As one local peasant notes, “When farmers or their families
get sick and can’t afford medicine, it is the FARC that gives
them money to purchase what they need.”

From left to
right: A coca paste lab on a small farm in the Macarena; coca pickers
harvest the leaves and mix them with chemicals; the liquid chemicals
are
squeezed out and the resulting coca paste is then sold to traffickers
for
processing into cocaine in larger jungle labs. (Photo: Garry Leech)
The peasant population of the Macarena region sees no reason to
trust a government that has offered them nothing but repression,
or at best, total neglect. In August, the government ensured that
this distrust would become further entrenched by launching a militarized
fumigation campaign that made children sick while destroying essential
food crops. Once again, it is the civilian population that has been
victimized by the government’s counterinsurgency strategy.
For the local peasant population, the only ones they can turn to
for help are the guerrillas, which undermines the very counterinsurgency
objectives that the government should be trying to achieve: winning
the hearts and minds of the people.
Ultimately, it is unlikely that the fumigations will eliminate
coca cultivation in the Macarena region. A significant percentage
of the crops survived the spraying and many of those that were destroyed
will simply be replaced with new ones. Sometimes this replanting
will take place on the same plots of land, other times peasants
will cut down more rainforest in order to replant. But as one farmer
points out, “If you simply start cutting down trees to plant
more crops, the FARC will fine you. We must obtain permission from
the guerrillas before we can cut down the rainforest.” It
is not always easy to obtain that permission because the FARC is
attempting to carry out a balancing act between funding its insurgency
from coca cultivation, allowing peasants to earn a living, and limiting
the destruction of one of the country’s most exquisite ecological
treasures.
There is no evidence that the Colombian government is willing to
attempt a balancing act of its own in order to implement a more
comprehensive counterinsurgency strategy. Until the government offers
peasants like Cecilia something more than military repression, the
local populations in areas such as the Macarena will continue to
see their welfare and survival as inextricably intertwined with
that of the FARC. Consequently, violence will continue to wreak
havoc on another of the country’s national treasures: its
people.
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