Statement
by State Department spokesman Richard Boucher, November 29, 2000
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF
STATE
Office of the Spokesman
November 29, 2000
STATEMENT BY RICHARD
BOUCHER, SPOKESMAN
COLOMBIAN REBEL CONNECTION
TO MEXICAN DRUG CARTEL
The Office of the
Attorney General in Mexico announced on November 23 that Mexican and Colombian
officials have exposed a major link between the Arellano Felix Organization
in Mexico and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). The link
was announced after Colombian Dr. Carlos Ariel Charry Guzman and Mexican
Enrique Guillermo Salazar Ramos were ordered held for arrest and transferred
to the Almoloya de Juarez federal prison in Mexico. Evidence shows FARC
guerrillas supplied cocaine to the cartel in exchange for cash and possibly
weapons. This development is another illustration of the FARC's deep involvement
in narcotics trafficking. Since late 1999 the FARC has sought to establish
a monopoly position over the commercialization of the cocaine base across
much of southern Colombia. The FARC forces all growers to sell only to
the FARC at one fixed price with only the FARC permitted to sell, at a
higher fixed price, to cocaine cartels.
The FARC has denied
these charges. We call on the FARC to demonstrate their non-involvement
in narcotics trafficking by severing all ties with the narcotics industry.
The FARC can demonstrate such a commitment by beginning voluntary eradication
in the coca growing areas under its control -- we note they have yet to
begin such a program after two years of managing the demilitarized zone
-- as well as by showing demonstrable proof of fighting narcotics trafficking
in these areas.
As of November 30,
2000, this document was also available online at http://usinfo.state.gov/admin/011/lef301.htm