Speech
by Sen. Paul Wellstone, October 24, 2001
Mr.
WELLSTONE. Mr. President, I am pleased to join my colleague, Senator Feingold,
with this amendment.
Mr. President, I
rise today to address disturbing developments in our antinarcotics efforts
in Colombia, and to join Senator FEINGOLD in calling for a shift in our
fumigation policy.
The motivations
behind the Andean Counterdrug Initiative and last year's Plan Colombia
are important--stop the flow of illicit drugs into the United States.
I, like every other member of this body, am extremely concerned about
the effects of drug use on our citizens, particularly our children. That
said, I am becoming more and more convinced that the plan advanced for
combating this problem targets the wrong source. What's more, I think
that the methodology used is neither fair nor effective.
I am talking about
aerial coca eradication, which has been the focus of our efforts in Colombia.
Last December, the Colombian military began a massive fumigation campaign
in southern Colombia, with U.S. support. Under the current plan, pilots
working for DynCorp, a major U.S. government military contractor, spray
herbicide on hundreds of thousands of acres of Colombian farmland. To
date, the provinces of Putumayo, Cauca, and Narino have been most affected,
but expansion of the program is imminent. I have a number of concerns
about this approach.
First, I have become
increasingly convinced that fumigation is an extreme, unsustainable policy
causing considerable damage. Since the fumigation campaign started last
December, rivers, homes, farms, and rainforests have been fumigated with
the herbicide Round-Up. Because
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Round-Up is a ``non-selective'' herbicide, it kills legal food crops and
the surrounding forest, in addition to coca plants. Furthermore, farmers
and their supporters contend that glyphosate is hazardous. I'm beginning
to believe they're right.
Round-Up is classified by its manufacturer, Monsanto, as ``relatively
safe.'' However, the EPA classifies Round-Up as ``most poisonous,'' while
the World Health Organization classifies it as ``extremely poisonous.''
Directions on glyphosate products, like Round-Up, warn users not to apply
the product in a way that will cause contact with people ``either directly
or through drift.'' These instructions and warnings are not being taken
into consideration.
What's more, according
to the Round-Up website, the herbicide is not recommended for aerial application
and is not supposed to be applied near or in bodies of water. However,
in Colombia, much of the coca cultivation takes place alongside rivers
and ponds, and these bodies of water are routinely fumigated. A November
2000 report by the American Bird Conservancy notes that Round-Up is extremely
toxic to fish and other aquatic organisms.
Putumayo, where
the spraying has been principally concentrated, reports over 4,000 people
with skin or gastric disorders, above and beyond normal averages. In January
and February alone, over 175,000 animals were killed in that region. All
had been sprayed with Round-Up and Cosmo Flux, a Colombian-made mix.
Mr. President, in
light of this mounting evience, I don't believe that we can sit idly by
as U.S. taxpayer dollars go toward such a policy. The environmental consequences
are serious. The health effects are concerning at best, deadly at worst.
This is an especially
personal issue for me. As the only United States Senator to withstand
aerial fumigation, I feel I have a unique obligation to address this matter
forcefully. When I visited Colombia last year, I was sprayed with glyphosate.
At the time, I had little idea of the threats that such activity entailed.
Families continue
to suffer hunger as legal food crops have been destroyed and livestock
have been harmed. No emergency aid has been provided, and economic development
efforts have yet to be realized. In fact, according to a report by Colombian
Human Rights Ombudsman Eduardo Cifuentes, eleven different alternative
development projects were fumigated during the campaigns. We are undermining
our own programs.
This brings me to
my second point; alternative development aid has not been delivered, even
though fumigation has been in place since December.
While fumigation
began soon after the passage of Plan Colombia, alternative development
programs have yet to get off the ground. Last July, the Center for International
Policy held a meeting with experts from
southern Colombia.
At that meeting, they reported that those communities who have signed
pacts agreeing to eradicate coca in December and January have not yet
received aid. These communities--like Puerto Asis and Santa Ana, both
in Putumayo--have expressed their willingness to work on the problem.
What have they gotten instead? They have gotten babies with rashes, dead
animals, ruined food crops, and tainted water.
In addition, the
slowness in aid delivery makes farmers lose further trust in the Colombian
government and in eradication. As we all know, alternative development
takes time to plan and implement. We can expect that USAID will be moving
ahead in the future. But it is clear from events in southern Colombia
that there was no coordination between fumigation efforts and alternative
development. A massive fumigation campaign went ahead when development
programs were still in the planning stage. This is the height of irresponsibility.
How are we going
to get Colombian peasants to change their practices without viable alternatives?
Under the current
plan, the government of Colombia will give each family up to $2,000 in
subsidies and technical assistance to grow substitute crops like rice,
corn and fruit. We are providing $16 million specifically for these purposes--a
mere 1 percent of the total Colombian aid package. Many believe this is
not enough, with the average coca farmer making about $1,000 a month.
Regardless, these subsidies have yet to take effect. We haven't even tried.
In the USAID ``Report
on Progress Toward Implementing Plan Colombia--Supported Activities''
released at the end of last month, these facts become apparent. Of the
more than $40 million obligated under Plan Colombia for promoting economic
and social alternatives to illicit crop production, a mere $6 million
has been spent. Of the 37,000 families who signed ``social pacts'' agreeing
to eliminate coca in exchange for alternative development programs, only
568 families had received their first package of assistance.
Moreover, fumigation
campaigns without alternative development threaten the very goals they
claim to support. They fuel a mistrust in the national government, as
communities are forced by the campaigns to flee their homes and move elsewhere
in search of food. Individuals in these areas often turn to the guerrillas
or paramilitaries in search of security, exacerbating the violent conflict
and undermining the rule of law in the region. An abandonment of the fumigation
policy will help to strengthen the relationship between farmers in these
areas and the national government, which will help eradication efforts
in the long term.
A recent study by
the conservative think tank, Rand Corporation, rightly notes that the
aerial fumigation of coca crops is backfiring politically. They say: ``Absent
viable economic alternatives [such as crop substitution and infrastructure
development], fumigation may simply displace growers to other regions
and increase support for the guerrillas.''
Next, I don't believe
that fumigation solves the problem of coca cultivation, but simply shifts
the problem from one area to another. In a New York Times interview with
Juan de Jesus Cardenas, governor of the Huila province, reporter Juan
Forero wrote the following: ``the governor of Huila said regional leaders
across the southern area of Colombia believed that defoliation would simply
drive farmers to cultivate coca and poppies in other regions. `That is
what happened with defoliation of Putumayo, with the movement of displaced
people into Narin 6o,' said the governor.'' Likewise, our Ambassador to
Colombia, Mrs. Anne Patterson, has acknowledged that coca had appeared
for the first time in the eastern departments of Arauca and Vichada.
Fumigation without
adequate alternative development programs in place creates a vacuum in
the local economy and food supply. This causes coca growers to flee and
move deeper into the agrarian frontier, where they replant coca, often
twice as much, as an insurance policy. This causes deforestation and instability
among residents indigenous to the new areas of production.
This has implications
not only on ecology, but also on regional security. Brazil, Ecuador, Panama,
Peru, and Venezuela, have been and will increasingly be affected by massive
population flows caused by aerial eradication. Frankly, I do not want
to be responsible for contributing to an already devastating humanitarian
catastrophe.
Putting aside these
concerns, I must ask: ``to date, just how effective have our efforts been
at eradicating coca?'' Regrettably, the answer is--not very good!
Recent estimates
by U.S. analysts report that there are now at least 336,000 acres of coca
in Colombia, far higher than earlier estimates. The United Nations, using
different methodology, put the amount even higher for last year's major
growing season--402,000 acres. Although about 123,000 acres of coca plants
have been fumigated under Plan Colombia, cultivation increased by 11 percent
last year. What are we accomplishing here?
There is a way out.
Local governments have pledged to eradicate coca-without harmful fumigation;
I think they deserve a chance.
In May, six governors
from southern Colombia, the region where most of Colombia's coca is grown,
presented ``Plan Sur,'' a comprehensive strategy for coca elimination,
alternative development, and support for the peace process. The plan opposes
fumigation as destructive and unnecessary. The governors ask that communities
have
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the chance to manually eradicate their crops, and call for sufficient
alternative development funding.
Twice this year, I have met with these governors, as well as representatives
from the Colombian House and Senate, and NGO leaders. They are an impressive,
courageous group. In their visit to Washington in March, four of the governors
from southern Colombia, led by Ivan Guerrero of Putumayo, denounced fumigation
and called for a more humane and sustainable approach to coca eradication.
Governor Jaramillo Martinez of Tolima stated: ``fumigation is not working
as expected. It is displacing people and continuing to deforest the jungle.
We need to give these farmers the opportunity to grow other crops.''
I am in full agreement.
The present course is not only destructive, but also ineffective.
Meanwhile, opposition
to fumigation continues to mount. Numerous mayors from southern Colombia
support the governors in their call to change the policy. And, prompted
by these same concerns, other prominent officials like Carlos Ossa, the
nation's general comptroller, have called for a suspension of spraying.
In July, Judge Gilberto Reyes ordered ``the immediate suspension of the
entire fumigation project''; it seems he, too, wants definitive answers
on the effects of glyphosate.
However, President
Pastrana's government continues to spray large swaths of territory. Frankly,
the decision to proceed despite widespread opposition was a disappointment.
In a country that has struggled to promote democracy and lawfulness, surely
this was the wrong course of action.
Yet I refuse to
give up on Colombia and its brave citizenry. I believe there are many
positive steps the United States can take to reduce drug production and
promote peace and democracy in Colombia and the Andes.
I join Senator FEINGOLD
in opposing only those parts of this package that damage human rights
and the environment--not the bulk of the assistance for alternative development,
judicial support and interdiction efforts through the police.
In concluding, I
believe there must be a moratorium on further fumigation until alternative
development is implemented. I am pleased that my colleague, Senator LEAHY
saw fit to include language that would withhold funding for aerial fumigation
without first determining and reporting to Congress on the health and
safety effects of the chemicals being used, and the manner of their application.
Our decisions should reflect the will of the Colombian people. Colombian
governors, parliamentarians, mayors, judges, and activists have all called
for an end to spraying. Too much is riding on our decisions, made so far
away.
I further believe
we should play a more effective role by helping create genuine economic
alternatives for the peasant farmers and others involved in the Andean
drug trade. As the failure of our current policy shows, the most that
can be expected from the strategy of eradication and interdiction is moving
the areas of production from one country to another and thereby spreading
the problems associated with the drug market.
Finally, we should
better combat drug abuse here at home through funding drug treatment and
education programs. As long as there is constant demand for cocaine and
heroin in our country, peasants in the Andes with no viable alternatives
will continue to grow coca and poppies simply to survive.
I will summarize
this way. When I look at this Andean Counterdrug Initiative and last year's
Plan Colombia, I think the intention is right on the mark and in good
faith: protecting our children and our citizens, from drugs. The methodology
is absolutely flawed. We would actually be doing a much better job if
we focused on the demand for the drugs in our own country.
I remember when
I met with the Defense Minister in Colombia, Mr. Ramirez, he said: We
export 300 metric tons of cocaine to the United States. As long as we
have this demand, we will continue to do it. Someone will do it.
There will come
a point when we will look at addiction and make sure we cover this and
we will get help to people so they get into treatment programs. We will
do what we need to do by way of prevention. That will be far more the
answer than this effort.
I will focus on
the fumigation. I have become increasingly convinced--and I think Senator
Feingold talked about this--that it is an extreme, unsustainable policy
which I think causes damage to people. The experts will say that the spraying
is classified by Monsanto as ``relatively safe''. But the EPA calls it
``most poisonous'', and the World Health Organization classifies it as
``extremely poisonous''. Talk to the people living there and listen to
them. They are the ones saying they have the rashes, headaches, nausea,
and are getting sick.
With all due respect,
I cannot blame them for being a little skeptical about what all these
experts tell them. There is some good language in this foreign operations
bill that Senator Leahy worked on saying we have to do a careful study
of the health effects of this, which I believe is right on the mark. Talk
to the Governors of different regions. They are worried about what this
is doing to them. It is easy for us to say it is not a problem. It is
easy for Monsanto to say that.
I was kidding around
with Senator Feingold, and said: I feel like I have some expertise in
that I think I am the only U.S. Senator to withstand aerial fumigation.
I was sprayed when I was in Colombia--I don't think on purpose. I don't
live there. It was just one time, not over and over and over again.
The second point
that this amendment speaks to--and I pressed the Ambassador, who I think
is very good; we have a very good Ambassador. I said to her, ``the social
development money was supposed to go with this''. Unfortunately, what
we are doing, we are also eradicating legal crops. That is part of the
problem.
The other part of
the problem is we are telling campesinos we are going to do the spraying
and eradicate the crops without alternatives for them to put food on the
table for themselves and their families. The whole idea was, with the
spraying we're going to give campesinos the social development money and
the viable alternatives for their families. This amendment speaks to that
and makes it clear we have to see that social development money on the
ground; that is to say, where people live.
I join Senator Feingold
in this focus on what I call environmental justice. We both have tried,
to the best of our ability, to raise the human rights concerns. I did
that in an earlier statement today. I will not go over it again.
The Leahy language
would withhold funding for aerial fumigation without first determining
and reporting to Congress on the health and safety effects of the chemicals
being used and the manner of their application. It is important that language
be implemented. I say that on the floor of the Senate.
Many Colombian governors,
parliamentarians, mayors, judges, and activists have called for an end
to the spraying. Between the focus of this amendment, with the Leahy language,
the emphasis we have on this amendment on the alternative economic developments--and
again I say one more time, since I have already spoken to the best of
my ability on human rights--it will make a lot more difference when we
deal with the demand for it here in our own country. That is what will
make a difference.
My hope is this
amendment will be accepted. I thank the Senator for his effort. I don't
want to hold up the progress of the bill.
I thank Senator
Leahy for his statement about this foreign operations appropriations bill.
I think it was a very important statement. In particular, I say to my
colleagues, I think probably people in the United States of America will
no longer be isolationist again. People are painfully aware of the interconnections
of the world in which we live. Many of these countries are our neighbors
whether we want them to be so or not. I think there is much more of a
focus on the world. We understand now that we ignore the world at our
own peril.
This is a good piece
of legislation overall. I presented my critique of Plan Colombia, and
I would like to see some things change. I think we have done our very
best through some amendments and speaking out.
As long as we are
talking about this world in which we live, I want to mention, and I will
do this in 3 minutes, on September 11--everybody has talked
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about it--but I have my own framework for thinking about this and I just
want to mention it.
In 1940 and 1941, the Germans engaged in an unprecedented bombing of civilians
in Great Britain to weaken civilian opposition to Nazism, and 20,000 citizens
were killed, murdered. On September 11, almost 6,000 Americans, innocent
civilians, were murdered. Therefore, I think there is absolute moral justification
for taking the kind of action we believe we must take so terrorists don't
have free rein, to try to prevent this from happening again. That is why
I reject the arguments about what were the underlying causes of the hatred
or violence.
I said to friends,
some who make that argument, you never ask me to give a speech about what
caused those men to murder Matthew Shepard, a gay man in Wyoming. How
could they have that hatred? They murdered him. Murder is murder. Camus
said murder is never legitimate.
Here is the question
I have. In trying to achieve this goal, I think that force, unfortunately--and
for me, the military option, the use of force, is always the last option--is
one of the options that is necessary. In the end, I think the question
is: Do we make this a better world, this journey we are taking?
I have spoken of
humanitarian assistance. But the other point I want to make is, over and
over again, we should speak on the floor, I understand that this is easier
said than done, but reports of innocent people being murdered in a nursing
home or hospital are concerning. I have no reason to believe that those
who are carrying out the military campaign are not making every effort
to keep this away from innocent civilians. I have no reason to believe
that they are not making every effort. But I will tell you, we have to
be concerned every single time our military action, our bombing, leads
to the death of an innocent civilian in Afghanistan. These people are
not our enemies. Every time it happens, even though it is inadvertent,
never on purpose, it is a contradiction of the values we live by. It does
us no good when it comes to the rest of the Muslim and Islamic world.
So I would like
to continue to make the appeal that in carrying this out with the use
of force, the highest priority must be to avoid the loss of innocent life
in Afghanistan.
As President Bush
said, these Afghans are among the poorest people in the world. They are
not our enemies. The terrorists and those who harbor terrorists are our
enemies. The Afghans are not our enemies. It is a tragedy, and I deeply
regret the fact that there are innocent Afghans who lost their lives as
a result of the bombing.
I yield the floor.
As of October 25,
2001, this document was also available online at http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/B?r107:@FIELD(FLD003+s)+@FIELD(DDATE+20011024)