Duque telling Colombia citizens are better off with illegal armed groups: governor

(Image credit: Plantas Venenosas)

Coca farmers and a governor from the south of Colombia are saying that President Ivan Duque is failing to comply with a counter-narcotics strategy that is part of an ongoing peace process.

The farmers and the governor of the Nariño province want the government to reallocate budgets that would allow the national government to fulfill promises made by former President Juan Manuel Santos to replace coca, the base ingredient for cocaine, with legal crops.

Furthermore, the farmers want the government to abstain from fumigating or forcibly eradicating crops as vowed by Defense Minister Guillermo Botero and supported by the United States, the country providing the chemicals.

According to Nariño governor Camilo Romero, the national government has deceived both the coca growers and regional governments for refusing to carry out the crop substitution program in 26 of the 27 municipalities where farmers signed up, despite violent resistance from drug traffickers.

Nariño Governor Camilo Romero

Ramiro and the farmers organization are meeting with representatives of the United Nations and the European Union on Tuesday to talk about the reduction of coca cultivation in Nariño, the number one coca-growing region in Colombia.

The meeting is not attended by any representative of the national government or that of the United States, which has been waging an utterly ineffective “war on drugs” for decades, but refuses to cooperate with the UN-monitored substitution program that is widely seen as the most effective.


Colombia’s renewed war on drugs could get ugly, and solve nothing


Nariño Governor Camilo Romero

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