In Pictures
Aiming a blow at narcos, Colombia pays farmers to uproot coca
Farmers paid to replace coca with coffee and cocoa, but risks and doubts persist in conflict zones.

As cocaine production reaches an unprecedented high, Colombia’s government is trialling a more peaceful remedy to its enduring narcotics crisis – offering payments to farmers to uproot coca crops, the primary ingredient in the drug.
Alirio Caicedo and his son Nicolas are among the latest beneficiaries. A decade ago, they planted their fields with coca, staking their livelihoods on the persistent demand from criminal gangs.
Now, the Caicedos are digging up those same crops, uncertain of what the future holds.
They are joined by about 4,000 other Colombian families who have entered into agreements with the government to replace coca with cocoa and coffee.
The initiative forms part of a $14.4m effort aimed at reducing the supply of a substance blamed for inflicting immeasurable misery on the country.
Colombia’s rural communities are often coerced by armed groups into cultivating coca, with forests cleared to make way for the illicit crop.
Authorities are aiming to eradicate coca on 45,000 hectares (111,000 acres) in three of Colombia’s most conflict-ridden regions, including the southwestern Micay Canyon.

For farmers like the Caicedos, the transition is fraught with risk.
AdvertisementThere is no guarantee their new crops will thrive, nor that guerrillas and other armed groups – whose revenues are tied to cocaine – will leave them in peace.
With coca, the Caicedos say they could count on earning approximately $800 a month. Under the new scheme, they have received an initial payment of about $300 to begin cultivating coffee, with more in the pipeline.
Gustavo Petro, Colombia’s first left-wing president, assumed office in 2022 with a pledge to shift his country away from the United States-led “war on drugs” – a campaign widely blamed for the double victimisation of rural Colombians living under the shadow of violence.
Since then, cocaine production in Colombia – the world’s largest exporter – has soared to record levels, driven by sustained demand in Europe and the US.
Previous attempts at crop substitution have failed, often undermined by the disruptive actions of armed groups and the eventual drying up of government support.
Gloria Miranda, who heads Colombia’s illegal crop substitution programme, cautioned that it would be naive to believe the new initiative could end drug trafficking “as long as there is a market of 20 million consumers and it (cocaine) remains illegal”.
President Petro, in his pursuit of “total peace”, has prioritised negotiation with armed groups over military confrontation, rolling back forced coca eradication.

However, most talks have faltered, and the return of Donald Trump to the White House in January has intensified pressure on Bogota. The Trump administration is reassessing Colombia’s status as a partner in the anti-drug campaign, threatening to curtail millions of dollars in military aid.
AdvertisementGiven the high stakes, observers are concerned the crop replacement scheme may be exploited.
Some farmers may “try to deceive” by accepting state funds while continuing to cultivate coca, warned Argelia’s government secretary, Pablo Daza.
Without rigorous oversight, “the chances are quite high that we are wasting money,” said Emilio Archila, who oversaw a similar, ultimately unsuccessful, programme under former President Ivan Duque.
Miranda insists that “meticulous” satellite monitoring will ensure compliance, promising that anyone found in breach will be expelled from the programme.
While coca is best known as the raw material for cocaine, its leaves are chewed as a stimulant in Andean cultures and brewed as a tea believed to alleviate altitude sickness.
Colombia has repeatedly called for coca leaf to be removed from the United Nations list of harmful narcotics in order to license its use in alternative products, such as fertilisers or beverages – appeals which, for now, remain unanswered.







