Bolivia ended its drug war by kicking out the DEA and legalizing coca

Jabberwocky

Frumious Bandersnatch
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Sitting barefoot on a log, a farmer surveys more than 200 pounds of coca leaves drying out in front of his ramshackle lean-to here in the rainforest of the Chapare region, the muggy heart of Bolivia's coca country.

The leaves, he says, represent one of his three harvests per year, grown under Bolivia's policy of legal but regulated production of the crop. Each harvest will fetch about $200 at market, but half of that goes toward expenses, including pesticides and wages for locals who help pluck the ripe leaves quickly before they spoil.

As he chews a thick wad of the leaves, the farmer recalls how much more difficult his daily life was when coca production was still illegal in the country.

Coca, a mild stimulant, has been used for millennia by people in the Andes in tea and food, though it is most often chewed raw to give energy and treat ailments ranging from altitude sickness to menstruation pain. The plant is also the source material for cocaine and the target of anti-narcotics efforts across South America driven in part by the United States. From 1997 to 2004, a US-funded program seeking to eradicate coca in Bolivia by force plunged the Chapare into traumatic conflict.

"They would turn up suddenly, at any time of day or night, and start interrogating us — they would hit you or kick you for no reason," the farmer says, recalling the paramilitary anti-narcotics police forces once backed by the US Drug Enforcement Administration. "We used to sleep out in the open, in the coca field, so they couldn't find us."

Even though his crop has been fully legal since 2004, when the Bolivian government took the unprecedented step of legalizing production for domestic consumption, these dark memories still prompt the farmer to insist his name does not appear in print.

Wherever you go in the Chapare — one of Bolivia's two coca-growing regions — you hear similar stories of life in the 1990s and early 2000s: narco-slayings, police violence and rapes, and coca-grower protests ending in violence and death.

You also hear gratitude that Bolivia has replaced a strategy of eradication with one of regulated production to meet historic national demand for coca.

Related: How Bolivia Got Smart and Convinced Poor Farmers to Grow Less Coca

Farmers feel particularly indebted to President Evo Morales, a former firebrand coca growers' leader from the Chapare. Morales expelled the DEA from Bolivia in 2008 after violent confrontations in the region claimed 30 lives and he said he could no longer guarantee the US agents' safety.

"It is different now, the police are our friends," the farmer says. "Before, I would look away when they passed by. I didn't want to catch their eye. Now, we always stop and say hello."

The 2004 legalization ushered in a close working relationship with the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, whose estimates of land dedicated to coca in the three countries where the plant is grown — Bolivia, Peru, and Colombia — are widely used to calculate how much cocaine is circulating in the world.

The UN agency helps the Bolivian government track land used for coca with satellite images and backs on-the-ground visits by a small army of inspectors. According to the agency's annual survey of Bolivia's coca sector, published in July, the country's area of production dropped slightly in 2015 to 20,200 hectares. That's the lowest level since the agency began monitoring Bolivia's coca harvest in 2003 and roughly a third down from the total during the DEA's last year in Bolivia. It is also almost exactly at the national target of 20,000 hectares — enough to meet local demand for the plant while still ensuring minimal leakage into cocaine production.

bolivia-ended-its-drug-war-by-kicking-out-the-dea-and-legalizing-coca-body-image-1474399460.jpg


It might look like success, but Bolivia's ground-breaking coca reform is not popular in Washington.

Earlier this month, President Barack Obama underlined US disapproval when he officially declared, through a State Department memo, that Bolivia has "demonstrably failed" to live up to its international counter-narcotics commitments. The only other countries on the list were Venezuela and Burma.

A State Department spokesperson told VICE News in an email that Bolivia had "undertaken some successful counter-narcotics activities," but added that the country has not destroyed enough coca plants nor seized enough cocaine in transit to merit US approval.

Morales has made it clear he doesn't care what the US thinks.

"We in Bolivia, without US military bases and without the DEA, even without the shared responsibility of drug-consuming countries, have demonstrated that it is possible to confront drug trafficking with the participation of the people," he said earlier this year.

Morales built his political career in the 1990s and early 2000s by leading a coca growers' union in the Chapare, where he spearheaded heated anti-eradication protests at the height of the DEA's influence.

Legalization actually began under centrist President Carlos Mesa, a year before Morales won his first election in 2005.

The system — later dubbed by Morales as "coca yes, cocaine no" — allows each family to cultivate up to 1,600 square meters, known as a "cato," of coca plants. Farmers are obliged to sell their leaves at authorized markets, and if they cannot produce a receipt, they must justify why their harvest was lost (for example, because of blight) with a certificate from their local growers' association.

Exceeding quotas can lead to punishments such as pulling up some, or all, of a farmer's coca plants. In the Chapare, neighborhood committees check that none of their members exceeds the cato and report transgressors to the authorities.

The government also helps farmers willing to grow other crops such as citrus fruit, peanuts, yuca, and rice. Grants from the European Union promote the substitution of coca with aquaculture using local Amazonian fish.

"Families need support to diversify their crops, not prohibition — you can't coerce families into not being hungry," said Sanho Tree, a drug policy expert at the Washington-based Institute for Policy Studies, a left-leaning think tank. "By refusing to acknowledge that reality, the US approach practically guarantees this vicious circle will continue."

Related: We visited the front lines of Paraguay's slash-and-burn war on weed

Washington's continued chastising of Bolivia stands in contrast to its routine approval of the eradication-based anti-narcotics efforts of staunch regional allies Colombia and Peru, which both grow far more coca. Strategies in those countries can seem like a whack-a-mole game in which destroying crops in one area leads to them popping up somewhere else. Critics warn eradication does nothing to reduce demand for coca for the production of cocaine, nor poverty among the growers.

The UN crime office reported that Peru had 40,300 hectares of coca in 2015, almost exactly the same amount it registered in 2001 — the earliest year the agency compiled statistics for the nation. Colombia, meanwhile, saw its coca production soar 40 percent last year, according to the agency, to 96,000 hectares. That's still down by roughly one-third from 2001, but it continues a sharp uptick since Colombia's coca low point in 2013.

The link between the number of hectares farmed and the amount of cocaine produced is complicated by varying soils, climate, latitude, and processing techniques. Most experts believe that Colombian yields are greater than those in Bolivia or Peru thanks to more advanced processing and natural conditions allowing for four harvests per year.

The UN crime office estimated that Colombia's 2015 coca harvest had a "potential" yield of 646 tons of cocaine, most of which makes its way to the United States. The UN made no equivalent calculation for the amount of the drug produced in Bolivia or Peru, which tend to supply different markets, in Asia, Europe, and South America.

Large quantities of Peruvian cocaine continue to pass into Bolivia via light aircraft and backpackers who haul bricks of the drug through the dense, mountainous cloud forest of the frontier region.

Tim Torlot, the European Union's ambassador in La Paz, says he would like to see Bolivia interdict more of the drug, yet he still signs off on the country's overall strategy.

"By and large, the Bolivians have been good partners on counter-narcotics," Torlot said. "That is not to say that we are uncritical, but overall, we believe they are seriously committed to reducing coca crops. We like the way they have designed their policy, with an integrated approach."

For Roxana Argandoña, a 49-year-old coca farmer and mother of four who lives on the fringes of the small town of Villa Tunari, the biggest benefit of legalization has been the end of the climate of fear.

Argandoña is a prominent local member of the ruling Movement Towards Socialism party, known as MAS, and is in charge of the municipality's human rights program. She says she used to spend her time attending to cases of beatings, murders, and disappearances related to the coca conflict. Now, she says she mainly deals with domestic violence.

"There used to be all kinds of conflict before. Now it couldn't be more different," Argandoña said. "The soldiers would abuse us, especially the women, sexually. Now, there is respect on both sides. No one exceeds their cato. Some people don't even have front doors."


Source: https://news.vice.com/article/boliv...ng-coca?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter
 
"There used to be all kinds of conflict before. Now it couldn't be more different," Argandoña said. "The soldiers would abuse us, especially the women, sexually. Now, there is respect on both sides. No one exceeds their cato. Some people don't even have front doors."


Nice.
 
That's so beautiful. US government and federal agenciescan suck a dick if he doesn't approve of Bolivians doing what's best for Bolivians.

Fixed it because as we all know the president isnt the one who speaks for himself as there are layers of government with the president only having veto power in the end. Obama himself probably doesnt care much as hes out 3ish months and has no connection to Bolivia... just saying ;)
 
Fixed it because as we all know the president isnt the one who speaks for himself as there are layers of government with the president only having veto power in the end. Obama himself probably doesnt care much as hes out 3ish months and has no connection to Bolivia... just saying ;)

I actually like Obama and generally stick up for him, but this is one case where he can do more to support them, at least with words. The DEA is part of the Executive Branch, so the President has quite a lot of power over it. One could certainly argue that the DEA is quite ornery with regards to the executive, but Obama has the power to fire the head every week if he's displeased. He's just been much more ok with the status quo than I am personally.

And while it may be factually true that Bolivia is not upholding their international treaty obligations, the EU clearly has no problem seeing that they are doing what's best for their citizens.
 
^ I will give you all that however, politics is more then just doing what one feels he has to act the way he is advised to. Not saying you are wrong however, I understand why the president cant just say "no the dedicated federal agency is wrong and I'm going to fire them" as right as that may.

But hats off to the Bolivian government for deciding that their culture of farming is the way to improve their quality of life rather then listen to foreign entities.
 
Who consumes all the Cocaine in the world?? why us in the west:). Smart move by evo. Respect this guy, I think he has done a lot for Bolivia and tried his best to improve the lot of the people there especialy the indigeneous folk. Venezuela and Myanmar not meeting approval either. Generally it seems states that are more independent or hostile to washington are not meeting their requirements. Wonder why ?
 
Who consumes all the Cocaine in the world?? why us in the west:).

Yes sir, we most certainly do. And whether purposefully or not, efforts by law enforcement to stop its import, sale and consumption has failed spectacularly.

Each passing day, I think to myself: "How many casualties have been sustained in the past 24 hours due to drug war-based collateral damage?"

Perhaps consuming myself over such needless violence around the world - every fucking day and night - suggests that I'm too empathetic for my own good. But I actually sleep better at night knowing that, when passing by, I will typically go out of my way to help an addict who is in agonizing pain due to acute withdrawal (if possible), even if I have to break the law, but I digress (going way off topic, sorry).

Again though, you're totally right, take care :)
 
This is great and we need to do this here.

So let me understand correctly: coca is now legal in Bolivia but synthetic cocaine isn't??

Is that correct?

Which other drugs are legal/decriminalized in Bolivia and which aren't??

I mean if they have NO DEA then how could ANY drugs be illegal? (I believe they should ALL be legal by the way).

And I'm equally pissed at Obama and our government for criticizing this move: First of all, IMO the U.S. is NOT nor SHOULD we be the center of the world.

We are just ONE country.

Yes we are one of the most powerful if not the most powerful but we cannot and should not be able to tell other countries what to do.

And I mean I'm a liberal and overall think Obama's been a pretty could president but NO president is EVER for legalization of drugs.

IMO the closest we've had for a while is having Bernie Sanders be as liberal as he is and even he probably isn't for legalizing all drugs.

But every country that does something like this is a step in the right direction.

I think Thailand made Kratom legal recently too right?

Maybe eventually THEY'LL influence US instead of the other way around.
 
I went to Bolivia when I was 20 years old to get sober, for two months..... for about a dollar I got a garbage bag full of Coca leaves (they told me it was the best stuff at that market) they also gave me baking soda to rub inside my cheek, as it supposedly makes the coca kick in stronger.... I was flying so high almost daily that whole trip.... My whole face would end up getting numb and I would talk and talk to anyone who would listen.... It was like a nice smooth, long, and euphoric cocaine high, but it was better than any cocaine i had ever gotten to that point..... it was almost more like an adderall/amphetamine experience but felt more natural and organic.... Man i could use a garbage bag full of coca leaves nowadays....
 
This is great and we need to do this here.

So let me understand correctly: coca is now legal in Bolivia but synthetic cocaine isn't??

Is that correct?

As far as I'm aware, the following drug policy is in place in Bolivia when it comes to anyone of the hundreds of species of Erythroxylum Coca:

It is legal to possess the leaves of the aforementioned plant for the purpose of chewing on it and/or making tea.

It is illegal to attempt extracting the relevant (psychotropic) alkaloid known as Benzoylmethylecgonine ('Cocaine') for any reason whatsoever - no exceptions.

There may also be a caveat (if I recall correctly, but better not to quote me on it in case I'm way off): the legal possession of Erythroxylum Coca leaves applies only to Bolivian citizens, OR, Bolivian citizens of aboriginal descent.

Anyone who knows definitively what the laws in Bolivia are regarding the aforementioned drug, please feel free to correct any mistakes I've made.

Also, in case the current laws in question are specifically mentioned in the article posted by the OP: No, unfortunately I was too lazy to read the entire thing, sorry.

Which other drugs are legal/decriminalized in Bolivia and which aren't??

I mean if they have NO DEA then how could ANY drugs be illegal? (I believe they should ALL be legal by the way).

And I'm equally pissed at Obama and our government for criticizing this move: First of all, IMO the U.S. is NOT nor SHOULD we be the center of the world.

We are just ONE country.

Yes we are one of the most powerful if not the most powerful but we cannot and should not be able to tell other countries what to do.

I'm not sure about other drugs, however I will tell you this: the DEA is nothing but a burden upon America and the other sovereign states they operate in.

I'd be completely shocked if none of the thugs in uniform employed by this parasite of an agency have been corrupted.

Since their creation by Nixon in '73 (IIRC), the DEA has achieved no long-term goals set forth in its mission statement. That's correct: zero tangible results - a big fucking donut when it comes to productivity.

They've carved a devastating path of death and destruction around the planet, and have aided significantly in increasing tensions between law enforcement and the public at large.

If you can't tell by now, it's obvious I can't stand these fucktards.

Lately, they, along with state and certain local law enforcement agencies in the lower 48 (states of the United States of America) have begun abusive exploitation of Asset Forfeiture laws, meaning they seize cash from anyone they pull over because they suspect it's drug money (yet they don't have to prove it whatsoever) and they then use that stolen money as bonus pay for themselves.

Therefore, countless Americans with no criminal record who have never touched a 'street drug' (or other illicit substance) before in their lives have complained about having upwards of thousands of dollars in cash seized from them after being pulled over because they "look suspicious" according to the police. And in order to get back that money, they have to enter a lengthy judicial process which can take an average of 6 months to fulfill.

That's right - thugs in uniform actively robbing hardworking Americans of their hard-earned money en mass. It's bloody outrageous, plus, the mainstream media doesn't cover it because they're in cahoots with these disgraceful pigs.

Sorry, enough about that.

And I mean I'm a liberal and overall think Obama's been a pretty could president but NO president is EVER for legalization of drugs.

IMO the closest we've had for a while is having Bernie Sanders be as liberal as he is and even he probably isn't for legalizing all drugs.

But every country that does something like this is a step in the right direction.

I think Thailand made Kratom legal recently too right?

Maybe eventually THEY'LL influence US instead of the other way around.

America has made progress too - baby steps, but some progress is better than none right?

The one thing I admire about Obama is that he's personally pardoned hundreds (if not thousands) of non-violent drug offenders serving time in federal prisons. And it's unprecedented because he's pardoned more prisoners than all other former presidents combined (AFAIK). But there's definitely room for improvement.

By the way, did you know that Thailand's government is seriously considering either decriminalizing or legalizing 'Yaba' pills? At least I think that's how it's spelled. And they contain Methamphetamine, so... that's a bold move on their part.

Not that I'd recommend such a risky stimulant, but I wasn't expecting Thailand of all places to essentially reverse their stance, because if you don't remember, they were killing suspected drug traffickers in a similar manner that is currently taking place in the Philippines.

Re. the U.S: I expect that Marijuana will soon become legalized for recreational use in a few more states by next year. Big Pharma + Big Alcohol are viciously lobbying against this (donating a lot of money in the process) because they see it as competition. As is expected however, when put on the spot they say they're doing it because Marijuana is dangerous ("think of the children" bullshit).

Edit: I forgot to add that I too was rooting for Bernie, but it has become awfully clear (based on the leaks) that the DNC and Hillary Clinton were determined not to allow him to become nominated as the Democratic candidate. But I don't wish to discuss this any further because the electorate is bitterly polarized like never before. Hopefully you'll understand...

Okay I'm done, sorry for talking so much, take care.
 
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As far as I'm aware, the following drug policy is in place in Bolivia when it comes to anyone of the hundreds of species of Erythroxylum Coca:

It is legal to possess the leaves of the aforementioned plant for the purpose of chewing on it and/or making tea.

It is illegal to attempt extracting the relevant (psychotropic) alkaloid known as Benzoylmethylecgonine ('Cocaine') for any reason whatsoever - no exceptions.

There may also be a caveat (if I recall correctly, but better not to quote me on it in case I'm way off): the legal possession of Erythroxylum Coca leaves applies only to Bolivian citizens, OR, Bolivian citizens of aboriginal descent.

Anyone who knows definitively what the laws in Bolivia are regarding the aforementioned drug, please feel free to correct any mistakes I've made.

Also, in case the current laws in question are specifically mentioned in the article posted by the OP: No, unfortunately I was too lazy to read the entire thing, sorry.



I'm not sure about other drugs, however I will tell you this: the DEA is nothing but a burden upon America and the other sovereign states they operate in.

I'd be completely shocked if none of the thugs in uniform employed by this parasite of an agency have been corrupted.

Since their creation by Nixon in '73 (IIRC), the DEA has achieved no long-term goals set forth in its mission statement. That's correct: zero tangible results - a big fucking donut when it comes to productivity.

They've carved a devastating path of death and destruction around the planet, and have aided significantly in increasing tensions between law enforcement and the public at large.

If you can't tell by now, it's obvious I can't stand these fucktards.

Lately, they, along with state and certain local law enforcement agencies in the lower 48 (states of the United States of America) have begun abusive exploitation of Asset Forfeiture laws, meaning they seize cash from anyone they pull over because they suspect it's drug money (yet they don't have to prove it whatsoever) and they then use that stolen money as bonus pay for themselves.

Therefore, countless Americans with no criminal record who have never touched a 'street drug' (or other illicit substance) before in their lives have complained about having upwards of thousands of dollars in cash seized from them after being pulled over because they "look suspicious" according to the police. And in order to get back that money, they have to enter a lengthy judicial process which can take an average of 6 months to fulfill.

That's right - thugs in uniform actively robbing hardworking Americans of their hard-earned money en mass. It's bloody outrageous, plus, the mainstream media doesn't cover it because they're in cahoots with these disgraceful pigs.

Sorry, enough about that.



America has made progress too - baby steps, but some progress is better than none right?

The one thing I admire about Obama is that he's personally pardoned hundreds (if not thousands) of non-violent drug offenders serving time in federal prisons. And it's unprecedented because he's pardoned more prisoners than all other former presidents combined (AFAIK). But there's definitely room for improvement.

By the way, did you know that Thailand's government is seriously considering either decriminalizing or legalizing 'Yaba' pills? At least I think that's how it's spelled. And they contain Methamphetamine, so... that's a bold move on their part.

Not that I'd recommend such a risky stimulant, but I wasn't expecting Thailand of all places to essentially reverse their stance, because if you don't remember, they were killing suspected drug traffickers in a similar manner that is currently taking place in the Philippines.

Re. the U.S: I expect that Marijuana will soon become legalized for recreational use in a few more states by next year. Big Pharma + Big Alcohol are viciously lobbying against this (donating a lot of money in the process) because they see it as competition. As is expected however, when put on the spot they say they're doing it because Marijuana is dangerous ("think of the children" bullshit).

Edit: I forgot to add that I too was rooting for Bernie, but it has become awfully clear (based on the leaks) that the DNC and Hillary Clinton were determined not to allow him to become nominated as the Democratic candidate. But I don't wish to discuss this any further because the electorate is bitterly polarized like never before. Hopefully you'll understand...

Okay I'm done, sorry for talking so much, take care.






I agree with almost everything you've said.

I didn't know about how much money the DEA has taken from people and that's even more fucked up.

I don't think the DEA or drug war should exist or ever should have existed at all and that they are both HORRIBLY fucking evil.

I think ALL drugs should be legalized or at least decriminalized for 18 and over if you aren't driving a car under the influence.

There would be SO much less violent gang crime if drugs were legal since that's how most of the gangs make their money in the first place.

We INCREASE violence by keeping them illegal, and I actually think a lot of the DEA and government KNOWS this and doesn't care because it allows them to profit from it, allows the prison system to profit, and to some extent even allows big pharma to profit.

In the end, money is more important than saving lives to these people and THAT is why the war on drugs and DEA continue to exist, NOT because they are just stupid enough to falsely believe they are doing a GOOD thing.

NO.

At the highest levels they KNOW what they are doing is immoral and costing countless lives and just don't give a shit.
 
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