Welcome to the Shroomery Message Board! You are experiencing a small sample of what the site has to offer. Please login or register to post messages and view our exclusive members-only content. You'll gain access to additional forums, file attachments, board customizations, encrypted private messages, and much more!
Bolivia Steps Up Campaign at U.N. to Legalise Coca Leaf April 30, 2011 - ipsnews.net
In the coming months, diplomats at the U.N. body will face the thorny issue of how to address the production and use of coca plants in the Andes region of South America.
The United States and some of its European allies contend that coca leaf is a narcotic substance and that its production must be banned in accordance with the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs.
The Bolivian government strongly disagrees, and for the past two years has been calling for an amendment to article 49 of the U.N. anti-narcotics treaty that considers coca production unlawful.
In a bid to convince the international community to legalise the use and production of coca in the Andes, President Evo Morales has repeatedly stressed that, "Coca is not cocaine."
Coca leaf-chewing by indigenous communities in the Andes is a centuries-old tradition. The native communities consider it a vital source of energy, nutrition and social unity.
Officials in northern Europe and the United States are opposed to Morales' call to declare coca leaf a non-narcotic crop because the use and abuse of cocaine is pervasive in their countries.
Experts say accurate figures on the numbers of cocaine users in the United States are hard to come by, but estimate the number of addicts at between three and four million.
According to Michael's House, a nationally recognised treatment center, the United States is the top user of cocaine in the world.
Medical research shows that cocaine, a refined, concentrated form of coca extract mixed with certain chemicals, causes hyperactivity and euphoria, but in high doses can lead to paranoia, delusions and addiction.
For decades, the U.S. has sought to extend its war on drugs to the Andean nations that grow coca, but with little impact on the flow of the drug to the United States.
A recent report by the International Narcotics Control Board noted that, worldwide, in many cases corrupt law enforcement officials work in collusion with the smugglers, and the U.S. is no exception.
Bolivia says it is taking effective actions against the illicit cocaine trade and adheres to INCB rules, but the U.S. continues to oppose La Paz's assertion that coca chewing be considered legal.
"The position of the U.S. government is not to support the proposed amendment based on the importance of maintaining the integrity of the 1961 Convention," the U.S. mission to the U.N. said in a recent statement.
Independent experts note that the U.S. itself has sought amendments to the anti-narcotics treaty in the past.
Martin Jelsma of the Transnational Institute, which conducts research on global social movements and their struggle for economic, social and environmental justice, thinks the ban on coca chewing is "a violation of indigenous peoples' rights and that it is in contravention of several other treaties and declarations".
The U.N. biological diversity treaty and the declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples, for example, fully recognise the right of native peoples to practice their cultural values and belief systems.
In a report released earlier this year, the INCB, which is obligated to implement the anti-narcotics treaty, criticised Bolivia for not doing enough to curtail coca leaf production and curb the use of cocaine.
"The board remains concerned about the continuous increase in both the reported total area under coca bush cultivation and the expected… leaf production since 2005," the report said.
For the Bolivians, such an assessment is nothing but a reflection of Euro-centric thinking about coca.
"[It's] part of a colonial mindset," Pablo Salon, the Bolivian ambassador to the U.N., told IPS in response to a question about why the U.S. and the some European governments were opposed to coca chewing.
Despite opposition from the U.S. and certain European nations, Bolivia has managed to get support from the 118-member Non-Aligned Movement, as well as Japan and Spain, to amend the treaty.
Diplomats and U.N. officials told IPS that the rules to amend the treaty require that parties to the treaty hold an international conference, which has not been scheduled as yet.
The coca leaf is the source of the addictive narcotic - cocaine,
leading many to call for the plant to be outlawed. Yet many Peruvians
and other peoples of the Andes mountains argue that the leaf's
nutritional and medicinal properties make it worth protecting.
It is a hard to believe that a plant could be at the center of such a
heated international debate.But for more than half a century, the coca
plant has been passionately argued for and against by many around the
world. In 1961 The United Nation's Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs
listed the coca leaf as an illegal substance along with cocaine and
heroin. Those countries that signed the convention were obligated to
ban coca leaf chewing because of a study published years before that
said it only had negative effects a statement that some vehemently
argue against.
Baldomero CÁceres, Social Psychologist, said, "I discovered that all
the medical studies were given lesser value or ignored altogether by
the UN when it did its study on the plant 50 years ago. Which shows the
fragility of this supposed study on the coca plant. Now the coca plant
is regaining its value even the higher classes consume coca flour. The
coca plant is considered less a drug and now seen for its nutritional
and medicinal value."
Coca is the plant from which the addictive drug cocaine is derived.
According to science Cocaine is just one of the many alkaloids found in
the coca leaf and accounts for only 1% of the leaf. Those who argue in
favor of coca believe the plant has too many positive uses to be
considered illegal.
Angelica Cortez, Coca Farmer, said, "The coca is medicinal it is not a
drug. It is for illnesses. If you suffer from Rheumatism, menopause, or
pains in your bones, that is what we use it for."
Coca has been used for thousands of years as a mild stimulant and is
deeply rooted in the culture of Boliva, Peru and in some areas of
Argentina, Chile and Colombia.
Anthony Henman, Anthropologist, said, "It tends to be associated with a
work context and ritual context. The 80% that remains is used as a
functional stimulant and is therefore associated with agricultural
work, or working the mines, or increasingly now in Lima with
intellectual work."
CCTV met with farmers in Peru that not only chewed the leaf for energy
during long hours of work in the fields, but also practiced reading the
coca leaf, a ritual passed on by their ancestors.
"She is asking coca mama a question in her life, and when she eats the
leaf, she is going to get an answer. If the leaf is sour or bitter
tasting then it is a negative and she should not proceed with anything
she is asking. If the taste is sweet it is a positive response to her
question."
For years now Bolivia, Peru and Venezuela have been fighting the
international opposition to the coca-leaf arguing for its traditional
uses. However, it has been an uphill battle, as many governments do not
discern between coca leaf growing for traditional use and production of
cocaine.