Coca
Latin America: Five Killed, Six Wounded, Six Missing in Attack on Colombian Soldiers, Coca Eradicators
Three Colombian soldiers and two civilian members of a coca eradication squad were killed Monday when the boat in which they were riding came under rifle and grenade attack.
Latin America: Obama Administration Declines to Restore Bolivian Trade Preferences, Cites Government's Acceptance of Coca Production
President Barack Obama has declined to restore trade benefits under the Andean Trade Preference Act to Bolivia, citing the Bolivian government's acceptance of coca growing.
Latin America: Coca Cultivation, Cocaine Production Down Last Year, UNODC Says
In its World Drug Report 2009, released Wednesday, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) reported tha
Drug War Chronicle Book Review: "Andean Cocaine: The Making of a Global Drug," by Paul Gootenberg (2008, University of North Carolina Press, 442 pp, $24.95 PB)
Phillip S. Smith, Writer/Editor
Latin America: Colombia's President Wants to Jail Coca Growing Farmers
Coca farmers, typically peasants in Colombia's most impoverished regions, have never been considered criminals, but that could change if President Álvaro Uribe has his way.
Latin America: Jimmy Carter to Harvest Coca Leaves on Evo Morales' Farm
At a Saturday meeting in the Bolivian capital of La Paz, former US President Jimmy Carter accepted an invitation from Bolivian President Evo Morales to go pick coca on Morales' coca farm in the Cha
Latin America: Shining Path Kills 14 Soldiers in Peruvian Coca-Growing Area
Leftist guerrillas of the Shining Path killed 14 Peruvian soldiers in a pair of ambushes in Ayacucho province, in the remote and rugged coca-growing region of the VRAE (Apurímac and Ene River vall
Latin America: Peru to Export Coca Beer
A coca trade fair in Lima designed to demonstrate that coca is not cocaine showcased a number of products, but the star of the show was a coca leaf beer whose manufacturer has plans to export it to
Coca 2009: Debate in the European Parliament
ENCOD is organizing an afternoon of debate and reflection in the European Parliament in Brussels.
Feature: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly -- The Top 10 Drug Policy Stories of 2008
With 2008 now rapidly receding in the rear-view mirror, it's time to reflect on the year that was in drug policy.
Latin America: Peru's Shining Path Making a Comeback?
In the 1980s, the Maoist Shining Path guerrilla organization conducted a bloody uprising against the Peruvian state in which nearly 70,000 people were killed.
Latin America: Bolivia's Morales Says Yes to Obama, No to the DEA
Bolivian President Evo Morales said at a Monday news conference at the UN that he would like to improve t
Latin America: Bolivia Suspends Operations By DEA
Already cool relations between Bolivia and the US grew even chillier over the weekend, as Bolivian President Evo Morales announced Saturday that he was suspending anti-drug operations by the US DEA
Latin America: Peruvian Coca Growers Push Into Indian Lands
Impelled by profits from the coca trade and crackdowns in other parts of the country, coca farmers in Peru's south-central Apurimac and Ene River Valleys (VRAE) region are pushing into indigenous l
Latin America: Bolivia Blocks US Anti-Drug Flights, Says It Doesn't Need or Want US Help With Coca Crop
Relations between Bolivia and the US, already strained by Bolivia's expulsion of the US ambassador last month for allegedly helping to instigate anti-government protests and the subsequent US "dece
Editorial: The Coca Wars are Futile, Whereas Drug Legalization is a Win-Win
David Borden, Executive Director
Latin America: Peru Constitutional Court Overturns State Law Okaying Coca Crops
The Peruvian Constitutional Tribunal, the Andean country's highest court dealing with constitutional issues, announced Wednesday that it had overturned a law approved by the Department of Puno that















