Coca producers in Colombia have marched against the government’s new crop substitution programme, part of the peace deal with the FARC rebel group.
Colombian marching protest farmers defend the coca leaf
The government has announced that swathes of coca leaf plantations, the raw material for cocaine, are to be eradicated this year.
Coca farmers face uncertain future as Colombia nears peace deal: https://t.co/nzMkoSoDyJ pic.twitter.com/Ja4qUx9nvU— AOL.com (@AOL) June 2, 2016
The farmers want authorities to respect their livelihood and make realistic policy proposals.
Edgar Mora is the leader of the famers union:“The areas with coca cultivations are isolated areas, with simple people, good workers.
Rural people haven’t found an alternative to cultivating coca because if they cultivate other products they’ll lose money and they don’t find profitability in the legal products the government talks about.”
New US Law Has Colombian Coca Farmers On Edge https://t.co/J8mkM6qCrs pic.twitter.com/VSJnPofhRW— The Daily Caller (@DailyCaller) May 24, 2016
The coca leaf was declared an illegal narcotic in the 1961 UN Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, along with cocaine, heroin, opium and morphine and a host of chemical drugs.
Coca leaves are chewed widely across South America and act as a mild stimulant.
When chewed, coca leaves act as a mild stimulant & suppress hunger, thirst, pain, & fatigue. pic.twitter.com/azfB2J4t22— Agwa de Bolivia (@AgwaDeBolivia) September 6, 2016
Post-Conflict Commissioner Rafael Pardo said the government would invest $340 million in the substitution program, which he said would benefit 50,000 families.