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Crime

Colombia's coca cultivation at record level

September 20, 2018

The area of land being used to grow coca in Colombia has increased by 17 percent, according to a UN report. A peace deal with the FARC rebel group was expected to reduce cocaine production, but the opposite appears true.

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Picture showing the growing of coca in Colombia
Image: picture-alliance/L. Robayo

The overall area covered by illegal coca plantations in Colombia increased by 17 percent last year when compared with 2016, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (ONODC) has said.

The amount of land used to grow coca leaves — the primary raw ingredient of cocaine — would have been enough to produce almost 1,400 metric tons of the drug last year.

The bulk of coca farming was taking place in the southern part of Colombia, the report found. Cultivation of coca in Narino department, on the border with Ecuador, surpassed 45,735 hectares (around 113,000 acres). That figure meant the region alone had more farmland dedicated to coca than the whole of Peru, the world's second-largest supplier of cocaine after Colombia.

The findings were based on satellite imagery, as well as on-the-ground verification, and echo similar findings by the US government.

President promises 'dramatic' remedy

While Bogota is a key ally in Washington's efforts to stem the supply of drugs into the United States, the boom in coca production has begun to test US-Colombian relations. US President Donald Trump recently threatened to decertify Colombia as a partner in the war on drugs.

Read more: Colombia's peace deal: Where is the peace?

Speaking in response to the report on Wednesday, Colombian President Ivan Duque acknowledged the growth in illicit crop farming and said action would be taken.

"The decision of the government is to have a comprehensive policy, which will be presented in the coming days and which will include the strengthening of our capabilities to intervene from the air, at sea and on land," Duque said after a meeting with his top military command.

"Our goal is to show dramatic results in the next four years."

Controversy over pesticide

Officials have said they want to resume aerial fumigation of coca plantations with the herbicide glyphosate. That practice was ended by former President Juan Manuel Santos after a report linking glyphosate with cancer, amid peace talks with the leftist FARC rebels, who were heavily embroiled in the drugs trade.

Read more: Colombia's cocaine: Who will take charge now?

The 2016 peace deal was expected to reduce drug production, but it appears the opposite has happened. Drug traffickers have taken over land once occupied by FARC, and some peasants are believed to have started growing coca in the hope of receiving compensation if they replace it with other crops.

Juan Manuel Santos on Conflict Zone

rc/cmk (AFP, AP, dpa, EFE, Reuters)

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