Statement
by Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Marc Grossman, European
donors' meeting, April 30, 2001
Statement
by
Under Secretary for Political Affairs
Marc Grossman
EU/IDB Conference on Colombia
Brussels, April 30, 2001
Mr. Chairman and
distinguished colleagues:
The United States
appreciates the opportunity that the Inter-American Development Bank and
the European Union provide today to discuss our joint efforts to address
the difficult challenges facing Colombia.
It is vital that
the international community continue the efforts it began -- first in
Madrid, and later in Bogota -- to help Colombia achieve the humanitarian,
social development, human rights, and drug reduction goals it has set
for itself.
All of us, and particularly
those of us here representing drug-consuming countries, have a special
responsibility to assist Colombia in combatting the violence and destruction
caused by the narcotics industry.
Both President Bush
and Secretary of State Powell have emphasized that the fight against narcotics
is the responsibility not only of drug-producing and transit countries,
but also of consumer nations.
The assault by drug
traffickers, guerrillas and paramilitaries on Colombia's democratic institutions
concerns not just Colombians, but all of us. When these illegal armed
groups threaten government authority, and kidnap and kill, they endanger
the human rights of civilian populations, the delivery of humanitarian
relief, the achievement of economic growth and expanded trade, and regional
stability.
Today, we take stock
of what our efforts to date have achieved and see what more we can do.
We have also heard Colombia's plans. Their effort will be decisive. As
President Bush said at the Summit of the Americas in Quebec last week,
the United States appreciates the difficult challenges Colombia and other
countries in the region face in fighting drugs, and stands ready to be
their partner.
Our job is now to
ensure that all of our assistance translates into real social and economic
improvements for Colombians seeking a way out of lives of poverty and
violence.
We also remain ready
to help the government of Colombia as it seeks to negotiate, and then
implement, agreements that end the conflict. This will take creativity
and resources from the hemisphere, from Europe, and from Japan. At the
Quebec summit, the elected leaders of the Americas expressed their firm
support for the efforts of President Pastrana and the government of Colombia
to achieve peace and reconciliation and to strengthen democratic values.
Leaders at the Quebec
summit also called upon the guerrilla groups to act in a manner that corresponds
to the efforts of the Colombian Government to achieve an end to hostilities
and the effective reestablishment of peace.
The United States
government made an extraordinary commitment to help Colombia last year
with an assistance package totaling $1.3 billion. Our aid package was
comprehensive, including both development and counternarcotics assistance.
The only solution
to Colombia's problems is peace, the strengthening of civilian institutions
to protect human rights, the reform of the justice system and the drastic
reduction of narcotics cultivation, production and trafficking. Democracy.
Development. Counternarcotics.
While I know that
our counternarcotics effort -- which is vital to the success of Plan Colombia
-- gets the publicity, our aid package included $230 million to help Colombia
address underlying social and economic development issues, without which
permanent progress toward the reduction of drug production and trafficking
is not possible.
Our programs support
alternative development, social programs, environmental protection, the
strengthening of democracy through good governance, the rule of law, improved
administration of justice, respect for human rights, humanitarian assistance,
and the peace process.
Through this assistance
package, we now:
-- Work with the
Government of Colombia and local non-government organizations to implement
an early warning system that will enable officials to react swiftly to
threats against the civilian population by illegal armed groups;
-- Help municipalities
promote employment for displaced persons and helping them to obtain basic
health care, primary education, and decent shelter;
-- Support the reintegration
of child soldiers into society through education, training, and community
based programs; and
-- Aid small farmers,
through our alternative development plan, which provides both social and
economic infrastructure to farmers' communities and assistance in achieving
a decent standard of living through production of licit crops.
Aerial eradication
of coca crops is a key element of Colombia's comprehensive approach to
providing both incentives and disincentives for coca production and trafficking.
Since last December,
the Colombians have sprayed about 25,000 hectares -- almost half of the
coca crop -- in Putumayo. Over 106 coca-processing laboratories have been
destroyed. These measures have encouraged over 3,500 families to sign
up for alternative development assistance.
Let me now report
on our proposed next step. Two weeks ago, at the Quebec summit, President
Bush announced his intention to seek $882 million for Colombia and other
countries in the Andean Region. In developing this assistance package,
we have benefitted from our consultations with the countries and institutions
represented here today.
As we heard at previous
meetings in Madrid and Bogota, the challenge within Colombia is also a
challenge to the Andean region.
President Bush emphasized
that the funds are not just to help fight drugs, but to build strong economies,
promote sustainable development, and develop the infrastructure for education.
The region's problems
-- supporting democracy, providing humanitarian assistance to the neediest
populations, fostering economic development, combatting narcotics trafficking
-- cannot be addressed in isolation. They cannot be addressed without
reference to Colombia.
Under the Andean
Regional Initiative, half of the proposed resources will go to Colombia,
while half will go to the six other countries in the region. Half will
go toward social and economic development, while half will support counter-narcotics
efforts.
While final figures
are subject to Congressional approval, this translates into $146 million
to maintain and expand the social and economic development programs we
have already begun in Colombia, and approximately twice that amount for
similar programs in Bolivia, Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela, Brazil and Panama.
Although there are
different ways to address Colombia's problems, our goals in Colombia are
the same: to give the Government of Colombia the help it needs to safeguard
its democracy, protect fundamental human rights, promote social and economic
development projects, foster peace and fight the drug trade.
President Pastrana's
strategy for addressing Colombia's challenges offers opportunities for
donor countries and institutions to determine where our assistance can
be most valuable.
We urge those here
today to do more to help Colombia at this critical moment in its history
through political as well as financial support for the peace process and
its implementation, as well as through support for its social and economic
development agenda.
We look forward to
continuing to work in close consultation and coordination with the government
of Colombia and the countries and institutions represented here today
to achieve those goals.
As of May 2, 2001,
this document was also available online at http://usinfo.state.gov/admin/011/lef102.htm