Production of coca in Colombia shows 8 percent rise

Despite record drug eradication efforts, a White House survey showed that coca production in Colombia rose for the third consecutive year in 2006.

Uribe, who travels to Washington on Wednesday to secure the continued flow of U.S. anti-drug aid, revealed the findings of the still unreleased report at the end of a long speech Friday. A transcript was posted Sunday on the president's Web site.

Uribe said the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy survey, which is based on satellite imagery, found that production rose 8 percent last year, to 156,000 hectares (385,484 acres) - an area twice the size of New York City.

"Yesterday (for Thursday) they told me they were worried about revealing this number because of my upcoming trip to the United States, that the Americans should reveal it," he said. "But that's why I'm revealing it. We're not trying to put makeup on what is a serious matter."

The much-awaited estimate, if confirmed, could revive debate about the effectiveness of Plan Colombia, the U.S.-backed anti-narcotics and counterinsurgency program that has cost American taxpayers more than US$5 billion (3.7 billion EUR) since 2000.

One of Plan Colombia's main goals was to halve production of coca within five years, but the latest estimate indicates 27 percent more coca is being produced than in 1999, the year before the anti-drug effort went into effect. A recent dip in the U.S. street price of cocaine, and rise in purity, also points to abundant supply.

Last year, Colombia's drug police used U.S.-supplied planes to spray glyphosate herbicide on 171,000 hectares (424,000 acres) of coca and opium poppies, and manually eradicated an additional 17,000 hectares (42,100 acres) of coca. In 2005, authorities fumigated almost 140,000 hectares (345,900 acres).

Yet the United States found the amount of coca in 2005 surged 26 percent, to 144,000 hectares (355,831 acres). White House drug czar John Walters argued the unexpected rise was a statistical aberration owing to a near doubling of the area surveyed.

Rafael Lemaitre, a spokesman for the White House's Office of National Drug Control Policy, said in an e-mail Sunday he had not yet seen the coca estimates, whose release was originally expected in April.

The inexact science behind the coca estimates has long irritated the Colombian government, and drug policy experts question using satellites to measure drug production in dense jungles and frequently cloud-covered parts of the country where state presence is almost nonexistent.

A soon-to-be-released estimate prepared jointly by the United Nations and Colombian authorities found that aerial eradication reduced the country's coca crop by 10 percent last year, to 79,000 hectares (195,000 acres) - almost half the U.S. estimate.

The data was provided to The Associated Press last month by a source familiar with the data who requested anonymity because the figures are not yet officially released.

Uribe said Friday that the varying estimates were "incomprehensible" and "disorienting," and he called on the United Nations and United States to unify their methodology.

"We've unleashed a battle with all our will and all our determination," Uribe said. "Could it be we've worked in vain? That all our work hasn't produced the desired results?"

He suggested earlier estimates had not included all of Colombia's territory.

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Author`s name Angela Antonova
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