InterPress Service October 17, 2000

Plan Colombia's Herbicide Spraying Causing Health, Environmental Problems

by Kintto Lucas

NUEVA LOJA, Ecuador - The military's fumigation of coca plantations in
Colombia with the herbicide glyphosate, part of the government's anti-
drug trafficking fight, is causing environmental damage and health
problems in neighbouring Ecuador's border provinces.
Residents of General Farfan and Puerto el Carmen, villages in the
Ecuadorian Amazon province of Sucumbios, on the banks of the San
Miguel River, told IPS that in the days after they heard airplanes
fumigating in the nearby Colombian department of Putumayo, dozens of
trees in their towns began to die.
"The consequences are felt on this side of the border - many trees dry
up and no one knows why, but it can be explained by the application of
some herbicides, like those used in the Colombian fumigations,"
commented Tito Piedra, resident of Puerto el Carmen.
Bolivar Botina, mayor of Puerto Guzman, on the Colombian side,
affirmed Piedra's information and added that seven people in the area
have died from intoxication caused by the extensive fumigation over the
last four months.
"Last week they stopped fumigating, perhaps because of the protests
by the people of Putumayo against Plan Colombia, but we presume they
will be back soon," said Botina.
Plan Colombia, which took effect Sep 1, is President Andres
Pastrana's seven-billion-dollar initiative to fight drug trafficking and
production. The United States has already assured 1.3 billion dollars for
the plan - largely military aid.  Colombia is to provide 4.5 billion, and
Pastrana is hoping Europe and Asia will put up the rest.
But it was the fumigation efforts in an area of the Colombian
department of Narino, bordering Ecuador's mountainous province of
Carchi, that caused the worst impacts on the Ecuadorian population.
"Since August the air we breathe hasn't been the same and there are
neighbours who have had sore eyes and headaches, which isn't normal,"
said Juan Cruz, a farmer from Tobar Donoso, a village in Carchi.
Arturo Yepez, a doctor from Tulcan, capital of Carchi, said the zone's
residents come to him with symptoms similar to peasants who have been
"poisoned from ingesting pesticides."
Peasant farmers from Tobar Donoso say there have been only low-
level fumigations in recent weeks, but they fear renewed massive efforts,
like those in late August intended to destroy 5,000 hectares of coca fields
on the Colombian side of the border.
At that time, Colombian anti-drug forces used three Turbo Thrush
crop-dusting airplanes, guarded by three Black Hawk helicopters and 200
soldiers, trained and equipped by the United States.
The director of the anti-drug police, Gen. Ismael Trujillo, said that with
the destruction of the coca fields and of the processing laboratories in
Narino his force has prevented the production of approximately 29 tonnes
of cocaine destined for the US market.
"While planes flew over the plantations, leaving a wake of glyphosate
in the air, and the helicopters escorted them to prevent guerrilla attacks,
the soldiers went into the forest to search for peasants who fled," a coca
grower, who requested his name withheld, told IPS.
On the Ecuadorian side, farmers reported that approximately six
hours after the spraying they saw extensive areas of yucca, or manioc,
with burned leaves.
Glyphosate, one of Monsanto's most important chemical herbicides,
was introduced in Latin America 25 years ago, marketed principally under
the name Roundup with annual sales of 1.2 billion dollars.
It is an herbicide classified as a Category III Toxin, which calls for
caution in handling because it can cause gastro-intestinal problems,
vomiting, enlargement of the lungs, pneumonia, mental confusion, and
destruction of the red corpuscles in mucus membrane tissues.
But the Ecuadorians also fear that in the eradication of coca, the
Colombian military is using the transgenic fungus Fusarium oxysporum.
The fungus is an alternative Washington proposed to the Colombian
government, but has been denounced by scientists and environmentalists
around the world because of the dangers posed by its release into the
environment.
Lucia Gallardo, of the Accion Ecologica organisation, conducted
research on the potential environmental consequences of Plan Colombia
in Ecuador and stresses that "Fusarium oxysporum would threaten the
biodiversity of the entire Amazon region."
"It causes damage to various cultivated plants, leading to different
types of diseases and wilting of the leaves, rotting fruit and even killing
the plant. It can also cause illness in humans, especially in patients with
depressed immune systems, with cancer or AIDS," she added.
Gallardo also says the fungus has the ability to genetically mutate and
scatter itself, killing other crops - it is an organism that easily adapts
to its
surroundings.
"By introducing the fungus into an ecosystem as complex as the
Amazon, it could attack important crops like manioc, a food on which the
indigenous peoples of the Amazon basin depend, and it could spread to
the coast, affecting coffee, citrus, banana and other plantations," the
researcher pointed out.
The Amazon could turn into a focal point of contamination, the effects
of which could last many years as the fungus can live for 20 years and is
disseminated by air, soil and water.
Fusarium oxysporum is categorised in the draft of the Protocol to the
Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention as "a biological agent for war,"
that once released into the environment is impossible to withdraw, such
that "its effects are unpredictable."
"The fungus can spread without taking into account political borders,
attacking other crops and the biodiversity of Ecuador, Brazil, Peru and
Venezuela," argues Gallardo.
Ecuador's Minister of Environment, Jorge Rendon, issued a decree
prohibiting the use of Fusarium oxysporum in the country and denied that
any experiments had been carried out within national borders.
According to the New York Times, the Colombian Minister of
Environment, Juan Myer, under pressure from the United States, agreed
to test the effectiveness of the herbicidal fungus in that country, but he
later refuted the reports, saying Colombia would not allow experiments
with the fungus there.
The Ecuadorian population living along the border is also concerned
that there might be a massive influx of Colombians, displaced by the
fumigations and by the escalation of armed confrontations between the
guerrillas, paramilitary groups and government forces.
Anywhere from 5,000 to 50,000 peasants from Putumayo could be
displaced and seek refuge in Sucumbios, according to official estimates.
Massive immigration would collapse the Ecuadorian province's
administrative capacity.
Several human rights organisations have reported that Colombian
right-wing paramilitary groups are buying up farms in Sucumbios, feeding
fears that confrontations with Colombia's leftist guerrillas will further
spill
over into Ecuadorian territory.
Experts believe that coca plantations could spring up in Ecuador, as
occurred in the early 1990s when coca eradication plans in Peru
prompted the expansion of coca fields in Colombia.
"If that occurs, the indigenous peoples and peasants in those regions
could be displaced, and the biodiversity and different ecosystems
threatened with extinction," stated Gallardo.
More than 20 communities and of the indigenous Kishwa peoples,
located along the border, would be at risk, she said.
Border authorities and non-governmental organisations have formed
the Amazon Defence Front to monitor the consequences of Plan
Colombia on the region's environment.
"We will not allow them to contaminate our ecosystem, because they
have already caused enough damage with their oil spills," said Maximo
Abad, mayor of Nueva Loja, capital of Sucumbios.

Reply via email to