By Luis Jaime Acosta
BOGOTA (Reuters) – Colombian land dedicated to the cultivation of coca leaves, a raw ingredient for cocaine, jumped 10% last year to reach the largest area in over two decades, a report by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) found on Friday.
Some 253,000 hectares were planted with coca leaf in 2023, the report said, up from 230,000 in 2022. This brought last year’s potential cocaine production up 53% to 2,644 metric tons, compared to 1,738 metric tons a year earlier.
The small-scale cultivation of coca leaf, which is traditionally chewed for energy or as an antidote for altitude sickness, is legal for some indigenous communities in Colombia.
UNODC said the expansion was mainly in southwestern departments of Cauca and Narino, whereas it remained relatively stable across the rest of the country.
The most concentrated areas of coca leaf production were in areas where leftist guerilla groups and criminal gangs founded by former far-right paramilitaries are operating.
Colombian authorities have for decades fought to reduce drug trafficking but the country remains one of the world’s leading cocaine producers. The United States has long pressured the country to reduce its coca leaf farming.
President Gustavo Petro, the South American nation’s first leftist president, has proposed a shift from what he describes as a failed anti-narcotics military strategy toward recognizing drug use as a public health problem.
He has promoted voluntary coca leaf crop substitution programs alongside more social investment in areas where it is being farmed, and has ruled out reinstating the aerial spraying of coca fields with the glyphosate, a chemical herbicide.
His government has ordered military and police to step up cocaine seizures, which last year reached a record 739.6 metric tons, according to defense ministry data.
Cocaine production in Colombia, strategically located between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, is controlled by armed groups and many consider it to be fuelling a nearly six decade-long internal conflict that has killed over 450,000 people.
(Reporting by Luis Jaime Acosta; Editing by Julia Symmes Cobb and Brendan O’Boyle)
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