Bolivia urges UN to defy Washington and legalise coca

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Bolivia is leading a Latin American campaign to legalise coca plants despite them being vilified by the United States as the source of the world's cocaine industry.

Under the slogan "coca is not cocaine", politicians, consumers and growers across the Andes are promoting the leaf's qualities and calling for coca-based tea, yoghurt, bread, toothpaste, shampoo and soap to be mass produced and exported.

Its fans claim it helps digestion, provides more vital vitamins, nutrients and fibre than most vegetables and can even combat obesity.

But the plant has been listed by the United Nations as a poisonous species since 1961 because it also contains the alkaloid needed to make cocaine.

Bolivia has this week been arguing the case for legalising coca to the UN narcotics and crime agency in Vienna and hopes to change its status by 2008.

Indigenous communities have chewed its leaf here since 2,500 BC and brewed it as tea to boost their strength and stave off hunger and tiredness.

Even today, Bolivia's tin miners, who work in appalling work conditions, chew coca around the clock to stay awake and dull pain.

Prsident Evo Morales, a former grower who has campaigned for peasants' rights to tend the crop, has vowed to crack down on cocaine production in Bolivia, the world's third largest producer after Colombia and Peru.

But he insists the country should be allowed to grow more coca for natural, legal consumption.

And in neighbouring Peru a frontrunner in next month's election, Ollanta Humala, has suggested baking 27 million loaves of bread from coca leaves for school breakfasts daily.

Small companies in Bolivia, Peru and Colombia, have launched coca-based energy drinks, biscuits, breads and yoghurts, all faintly green in colour and supposedly providing invaluable nutritional benefits.

And although not officially for export, leaf-shaped coca biscuits are a popular buy at airport souvenir shops.

Some also claim that the leaf's ability to stunt appetite could provide a natural cure to the world's obesity epidemic.

Maria Eugenia Tenorio, Bolivia's best known coca cook, even claims to have lost more than two stone in eight months by eating large numbers of coca biscuits.

"If Bolivians just started cooking with coca, they could solve most of the problems of malnutrition here," she said in her La Paz kitchen, kneading green coca flour into mashed potatoes to make a local version of gnocchi.

The US spends up to $1 billion a year tackling drugs in the Andes.

The idea that more coca can be grown in Bolivia without boosting more cocaine production is "pie in the sky", US officials say.

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Bolivia urges UN to defy Washington and legalise coca
By Sophie Arie in La Paz
(Filed: 20/03/2006)

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/03/20/wboliv20.xml&sSheet=/news/2006/03/20/ixworld.html
 
"so bolivia just expects us to throw away 100 billion dollars worth of american jobs just because it's 'technically' right for them to be able to grow their plant? absurd!" 8(
 
Crazeee said:
Bolivia is lea
But the plant has been listed by the United Nations as a poisonous species since 1961 because it also contains the alkaloid needed to make cocaine.

What the fuck is this? Who typed this article, coca contains cocaine. The only reason people chew the plant is because it has cocaine in it. To say that coca is not cocaine is like saying Salad isn't lettuce, really though coca is not just cocaine would be more appropriate, though i guess technically coca is not cocaine. I'm all for an end to the wod, but this shows a lack of knowlege on the author's part and an attempt to use reverse-propaganda on the Bolivian side. Coca is more than just cocaine would have been a better slogan.
 
^yeah man they said that euphemistically, to soften the meaning behind bolivia's appeal...one of those alkaloids in the coca plant is cocaine...of course coca contains cocaine, but they are right in saying that the plant is not simply cocaine and cellulose

i'd like to see this happen so they could focus on coke importation as opposed to eradicating plantations
 
mclaughlinr1 said:
"so bolivia just expects us to throw away 100 billion dollars worth of american jobs just because it's 'technically' right for them to be able to grow their plant? absurd!" 8(

do u realize that that can be $100 Billion back into taxpayers pockets :p
 
lyXw33d said:
i'd like to see this happen so they could focus on coke importation as opposed to eradicating plantations

But that would mean targeting someone other than the poor brown people who no one cares about anyway 8) . Of course this won't happen, the US needs the plantation destructions to remind everyone of its hegemony in the Western Hemisphere. Unless they really think its working...
 
Well the un got screwed over pretty bad with irak , so they should


not going to happen in a 1000 years though
 
Crazeee said:
The idea that more coca can be grown in Bolivia without boosting more cocaine production is "pie in the sky", US officials say.
It probably is. But the way things are, this is the US' problem, not Bolivia's.
 
I am from Bolivia and the most annoying thing is when people think the Coca leaf has no other purpose than to make rich white high school kids become prostitutes. I was just in Bolivia 2 weeks ago and there are a lot of people who use the leaves for things like tea or energy drinks. I completely agree with what Bolivia is doing and I'm with PsyGhost.. I hope more countries follow. If they spent that $1 billion on border control, I think it would be a better waste of money but that's just my $0.02
 
I love chewing coca leaves. Unfortunately, unless I go to south america, I won't be chewing to many.
 
Coca leaves would be neat being legal. While we're at it, lets legalize weed, shrooms, and all those other great psychoactive botanicals, besides maybe belladonna and related stuff.

The whole coca to solve the worlds probelm is a little over the top though, obesity it maybe could make an impact on.
 
Coca leaves would be neat being legal. While we're at it, lets legalize weed, shrooms, and all those other great psychoactive botanicals, besides maybe belladonna and related stuff.

The whole coca to solve the worlds probelm is a little over the top though, obesity it maybe could make an impact on.

I'm dont know if you have ever had coca leaves or tea, but it sure as hell isn't even in the ballpark range of shrooms, pot, or any psychedellic period. Its like comparing apples to oranges. I just got back from Peru, and in Cusco we had coca leaves, tea, candy, etc etc. It worked wonders for altitude sickness, but it really isn't anything worth trying to demonize. Its along the lines of coffee. So, by that logic, should we start arresting the millions of caffeine-addicted adults because they like a little "pick-me-up"? Same concept, except coca actually has other beneficial qualities.

I understand the risk of unprocessed coca leaves being refined into cocaine, but I think it's ridiculous that coca tea and other products that merely contain coca are illegal in the states.
 
Since cocaine is about 0.2% of coca leaves (Fresh, by wt., figure taken from wikipedia), that adds up to 0.5 kg of leaves per gram of cocaine.
now you would have to pick up some plant-based soap, shampoo, bread, etc. and look up how much of its original plant they contain... that without minding that extraction from leaves is so much easy than from any other product which cointains more compounds other than cocaine (in relation to the leaves)... i guess someone with better access to data could show that coca-leave products are not a cocaine source if one is to make money selling that stuff...
 
Kremar said:
Since cocaine is about 0.2% of coca leaves (Fresh, by wt., figure taken from wikipedia), that adds up to 0.5 kg of leaves per gram of cocaine.
now you would have to pick up some plant-based soap, shampoo, bread, etc. and look up how much of its original plant they contain... that without minding that extraction from leaves is so much easy than from any other product which cointains more compounds other than cocaine (in relation to the leaves)... i guess someone with better access to data could show that coca-leave products are not a cocaine source if one is to make money selling that stuff...

So if you are so concerned with cocaine production, wouldn't it make sense to make possession of more than 500g of coca leaf illegal with draconian punishment, rather than outlawing it altogether? You could even regulate it with behind the counter sales much like pseudoephedrine is done in the US these days.
 
Shit like this makes me so mad. Coca leaves were here before any of us were. If you ask me, the leaves should be getting mad at us for eradicating them (joke).
 
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