Photo by Aitor Sáez. All rights reserved.
This article was originally published for ¡PACIFISTA!
Colombia’s Tumaco region has the country’s
highest number of coca plantations: 16,920 hectares according to official
figures. But according to Rear Admiral Carlos Serrano, commander of the Fuerza
de Tarea Poseidón (a drug-trafficking task force), the number of hectares could
reach up to 29,000.
The region exports 60% of Colombia's cocaine bound for
the United States. Every month there are tonnes of cocaine, ready to be
marketed abroad, but the beginning of this supply chain is the peasant farmers.
Don
José, one of the coca farmers of Santa Rosa, one hour away from Tumaco by
speedboat, has always known that the plant is illegal,
but, he says, with no roads connecting to his land to be able to market other
products and job opportunities or interested entrepreneurs in the peripheries
of the country, the best alternative is growing coca. “We are willing to
replace crops, as long as there is a real commitment to support us. The government only comes
here by helicopter to damage our crops, shoot us and accuse us of being guerrillas”,
says one of the farmers.
The coca leaf is collected every 3 months,
whereas as alternatives such as cocao, banana or coconut is harvested annually. Furthermore,
with coca, the revenues are four-fold. From his two hectares, Don José harvests
12 kilos of leaves that sell for 2 million pesos ($680 US) per kilo. He earns
about 96 million pesos a year ($32,850 US), of which 40 million pesos are left over
as net revenues.
Exponential profits have boosted coca
plantations in recent years, despite the considerable amounts invested to
combat it. According to the US State Department, Colombia experienced a 42%
increase in illegal cultivation from 2014 to 2015.
Photo by Aitor Sáez. All rights reserved.
The coca leaf is the main sustenance of 80
percent of the Afro-descedent community on the banks of the Río Mexicano.
Photo by Aitor Sáez. All rights reserved.
Around the year 2000, coca cultivation arrived
from the Chagüí River to these more remote areas. “Coca brought the guerrillas,and then the paramilitaries”, says a
local man, responding to the recent threat of criminal gangs.
Photo by Aitor Sáez. All rights reserved.
Each farmer cultivates around 2 hectares using
traditional farming techniques, unlike the large plantations of the ‘mestizos’ who arrived two decades ago.
Photo by Aitor Sáez. All rights reserved.
A year ago, the eradication of crops was carried
out by aeriel spraying – which killed animals, contaminated rivers and affected
crops. It also developed allergies in local communities, and even, according to
some, deaths.
Photo by Aitor Sáez. All rights reserved.
Coca generates about 40 million pesos ($13,799
US) net in revenues. The farmer produces about 12 kilos of coca per harvest,
which sells as 2 ($684 US) million pesos per kilo.
Photo by Aitor Sáez. All rights reserved.
The 55 year old Don José used to grow coconut. “Now
necessities have changes, and families need to send their children to study”,
he explained, as a reason for the increase in coca production.
Photo by Aitor Sáez. All rights reserved.
Due to the lack of aqueducts, locals have to use
water from the river, despite it being contaminated by the poison used to
combat coca cultivation in the aerial spraying.
Photo by Aitor Sáez. All rights reserved.
In the village of Guayabo, an hour by speedboat
from Tumaco, there are about 100 families – all descendants of slaves.
Photo by Aitor Sáez. All rights reserved.
The route to Tumaco is along the Río Mexicano,
and can only be travelled by boat. A return ticket costs 100,000 pesos ($35
US), which is too high a cost for the locals. The tributary is drying up day by
day, and is limiting their ability to move around the area.
Photo by Aitor Sáez. All rights reserved.
A FARC camp in Variante, Tumaco. As the guerilla
Group demobilises, other groups linked to drug-trafficking have moved in to
continue the business.
Photo by Aitor Sáez. All rights reserved.
In the last year, coca cultivation has increased
by 90%, according to Rear Admiral Carlos Serrano, commander of the Fuerza de
Tarea Poseidón (an anti-trafficking task force). This already covers 16,920
hectares, although the number could be as high as 29,000 he says.
Photo by Aitor Sáez. All rights reserved.
The anti-narcotics police force are present in
the área. This year, the government has eradicated 5,000 hectares of coca
cultivation throughout the country, and of these, 424 were in Tumaco. The total
goal is to reach 50,000 by 2017.
Photo by ¡PACIFISTA! All rights reserved.
The armed forces uses helicopters to transfer the police responsible for
the eradication of the coca crops.