Thursday, 18 September 2008

The greatest adventure yet… returning home.

How easy it is to return – just step on that plane, plug in the earphones, chew the plastic tasting food shapes provided for your mid air nourishment and pass the hours over the Pacific Ocean… then the plane lands, you smile at the immigration official, collect your bags and walk through the gates – your family stands there, bleary eyed at 4am but with their arms open and takeaway coffees at hand. You step into the car and the machine moves over the smooth roads leading to a house that contains all those familiar smells and tastes and sounds… this is the place you call home. The air is clean and you can breathe it deep into your lungs, the water is clear from the taps and you can drink it without regard for cost or plastic waste. It takes awhile to be absorbed and then you realise that the past two and a half years of foreign environments are over. It’s strangely liberating.

I’m overwhelmed at the amount of “things” around me, overwhelmed at the thought of all these belongings of mine inside boxes stacked in the garage. After the enforced utilitarianism of backpacking having more than two choices of clothing in the morning leaves me manic and uncertain. Suddenly the value of the multi-purpose is no longer greater than the value of the aesthetic or the comfortable.

Talking contains similarities. After extended periods spent without real conversation on the abandoned roads through southern Chile, to suddenly speak is intoxicating. I watch this huge outpouring of words, each falling on the top of the other, and wonder if I actually convey what I am intending to. Seeing people I used to know invokes an unexplained fear and listening to old music brings a rushing of buried emotions and memories: I am indeed this same person who left here those years ago and I am also not. I think that returning somewhere is a process as complex as leaving and I will walk this new road slowly and see what brings fluidity.

What I have learnt beyond any doubt is that this country is where I belong. I return with the clear knowledge that I will not make a great fortune in my life here; I will not have access to European intellectualism or cheap electronic equipment. I may not even have the opportunity of international travel again. And I choose that. I choose it because this country offers a quality of life that is incomparable with the rest of the world. These mountains, this blue sea, these towering kauri trees and wild black sand beaches are an intrinsic part of my being. I could never leave them. And these people who we call New Zealanders, with their loud over-familiarity and strong accents, the beautiful ethnic mixtures that form our communities: Maori, Chinese, Polynesian, Indian, “Pakeha”, Malaysian… these are my people. Together we share a nation that could lead the world. I am proud to be a New Zealander… and I am home.

Thursday, 11 September 2008

September the 11th...

Here in Latin America this heavy date, etched permanently in the mind of the world, is mourned for a tragedy other than the attacks on the world trade centre. This date signifies the day that Chile's socialist democracy was brought crashing down under the weight of a military coup funded by the CIA in the height of the Cold War, 1973. For me, this day in Santiago feels loaded with a sadness that I cannot quite identify - the loss of a great politician, the loss of a country's democratic rights for western commercial interests, the loss of thousands of socialists, students, journalists and intellectuals who were subsequently arrested, tortured or executed under the 20 year military regime that followed the coup and the realisation of a truth that makes me shudder: that the right to life holds less value than the access to cheap minerals mined in nations whose military institutions are easily bought with blood money from the pockets of the wealthy.

Marking the history of this day I walked through the named avenues of Santiago's Cementerio General, a cemetery that is more like a city of the dead with immense streets of old and crumbling concrete tombs of wealthy Chilean families and politicians - a haunted sort of place that makes me wish never to be laid in a grave with a concrete stone to be left to crack and grow moss with the passing of the years. In the midst of this still and silent place lies Salvador Allende - moved from his previously unmarked grave after the fall of the military regime in 1990 to a place of memorial and honour, red roses strewn over the white marble monument and the word's of his final speech carved onto a granite slab sitting above the tomb where he and his family lie. At the front of the cemetery is another memorial - this one to the thousands of "desaparecidos", the disappeared, people who were arrested in secret by the military regime, whose bodies have never been discovered and whose families have never been able to fully mourn their losses. It is something that winds you to see it - thousands of names, and dates of births, in long lists across a granite slab that reaches for metres - each one representing somebody's son or daughter, mother or father, somebody's lover or best friend, somebody's brother, somebody's sister. Each one a person who had dreams, who had fears, who believed in a better world and used their life to speak out for it - and with their life, paid for it . Some families had placed photographs of their lost ones underneath the stone - young bright faces looking out, their last days filled with such fear and uncertainty. What an immense injustice.

Isabel Allende, the famous Chilean writer and Salvador Allende's cousin, has recorded her memories of this period and I think that she so eloquently captures the emotion of it that I shouldn't even attempt to define it for myself and rather will copy her words here in memorial to all that was lost that fateful September morning. May we never forget.

"On September 11, 1973, at dawn, the navy rebelled, followed almost immediately by the army, the air corps, and finally the corps of carabineros, the Chilean police. Salvador Allende was instantly notified; he hurriedly dressed, said goodbye to his wife, and went to his office, prepared to live out his oath: "They will not take me alive from La Moneda". His daughters Isabel and a pregnant Tati rushed along with their father. The bad news spread like lightning, and ministers, secretaries, staff, trusted doctors, some newspapermen, and friends all came to the Palacio de la Moneda, a small multitude wandering through the rooms without knowing what to do, shaping battle plans and barricading doors with furniture according to confusing instructions from the president's bodyguards. Urgent voices suggested that the hour had come to call out the people in a huge manifestation in support of the government, but Allende realised that such a summons would result in thousands of deaths. In the meantime, he tried to dissuade the rebels through messengers and telephone calls, because none of their generals dared confront him in person. Then Allende's bodyguards received orders from their superiors to withdraw, because the police had joined in the coup; the president let them go but demanded they surrender their weapons. Now the Palacio was unguarded and the great wood doors with wrought iron studs were closed from the inside. Shortly after 9am, Allende became aware that all his political skill would not be sufficient to change the tragic course of the day; the fact was that the band of loyalists locked inside the venerable colonial building were alone: no one would come to their rescue, the people were unarmed and without leaders. Allende ordered the women to leave, and his guards distributed weapons among the men, but very few knew how to use them. The news had reached Tio Ramon in the embassy in Buenos Aires and he managed to speak by telephone with the president. Allende bid his old friend farewell: "I shall not resign, I shall leave La Moneda only when my term is ended, as president, or when the people demand it - or dead". As they spoke, military units throughout the nation were falling one by one into the hands of the instigators of the coup, and in those same barracks the purge was begun against any who remained faithful to the constitution: the first people shot that day were wearing uniforms. El Palacio was surrounded by soldiers and tanks; isolated shots were heard, and then a heavy shelling that penetrated the thick, centuries old walls and set fire to furniture and drapes on the first floor. A helmeted Allende went out onto the balcony with a gun and fired off a couple of shots, but someone convinced him that exposing himself in that way was madness and forced him to come back inside. A brief truce was arranged to remove the women, and at that time the president asked everyone to leave him and surrender, but few did so; the majority dug in on the second floor, as he embraced the six women still by his side and told them goodbye. His daughters did not want to leave him, but by then the outcome was clear and by their father's orders were forcibly taken from the building. In all the confusion, they walked down the street without being stopped until an automobile picked them up and drove them to a safe haven. Tati never recovered from the pain of that separation and the death of her father, the man she loved most in life, and three years later, in exile in Cuba, she left her children in a friend's care and, without telling anyone goodbye, shot herself. The generals, who had not foreseen any resistance, did not know what to do; they did not want to make Allende a hero, so they offered him a plane and safe transport for him and his family. "You have misjudged me, traitors", was his reply. They then announced an aerial bombardment. Time was short. For the last time, the president spoke to the people by the means of the one radio station not in the hands of the mutinous military. His voice was deliberate and firm, his words so determined that his farewell did not resemble the last breath of a man about to die, but the dignified salute of a man taking his permanent place in history:

"...Our opponents have the power, they can crush us, but social progress will not be stopped with crime or with force. History is ours, it is made by the people... Workers of my nation, I have faith in Chile and in its destiny. Other men will surmount this grey and bitter moment in which treachery attempts to rule. You must never forget that - much sooner than later - the great avenues will open for a liberated people to pass through as they move toward constructing a better society. Viva Chile! Long live the people! Long live the workers!"

Bomber planes flew like fanatic birds over the Palacio de la Moneda, dropping their bombs with such precision that they exploded through windows and in less than ten minutes set ablaze an entire wing of the building, while tanks lobbed tear gas canisters from the street. At the same time, other airplanes and tanks were attacking the official presidential home in an exclusive residential neighbourhood. Smoke and fire engulfed the first floor of the palace and began to invade the salons of the second floor where Salvador Allende and a few of his followers were still entrenched. There were bodies everywhere, many rapidly bleeding to death. The survivors, choked by smoke and tear gas, could not make themselves heard above the noise of the shelling, planes and bombs. The army's assault troops stormed La Moneda through gaps burned by fire and shell, occupied the still blazing first floor, and with loudspeakers ordered the people to exit the building by an external stone stairway. Allende realised that further resistance would end in a bloodbath and ordered his men to surrender, because they could better serve the people alive than dead. He said his final goodbyes with a firm handclasp, looking each man squarely in the eye. Then they emerged Indian file, with their arms above their heads. As they came out, the soldiers kicked them and beat them with the butts of their weapons, and once they were on the ground, continued to beat them until they were senseless, then dragged them into the street where they lay on the pavement while the voice of a crazed officer threatened to roll over them with the tanks. The president was left standing beside the torn and bloody Chilean flag in the ruined Red Salon, rifle in hand. Soldiers burst in with drawn weapons. The official version is that Allende placed the barrel of the rifle beneath his chin, pulled the trigger, and blew off his head." (Isabel Allende, "Paula", 1994)

Viva Allende. And let all of us, who take our freedoms so much for granted, never forget how precious they are, or those who have lost them.

Wednesday, 27 August 2008

A musing on the loss of the market...

At the heart of every self-respecting town or city in Latin America there lies a market of fresh produce, a place for transactions, somewhere to meet and to gossip, the centre for the dissemination of news and a place where revolutions are born... I have eagerly visited many in this southward journey of the Andes, but one of the most impressive has been that of the Mapuche trading town, Temuco, in the Lake District of Chile.

On a cold, misty, grey winter's day walking into the market was sensory bliss; what an extraordinary collection of colour, shape, smell and sound! Rows and rows of fruit and vegetables in their splendor... from huge round blue shelled pumpkins to small green avocados, the peculiar shaped artichoke and the inviting shine of aubergine... perfectly round oranges and leafy green silverbeet, stacks of marrows and sacks of lentils; mounds of spices with the most wonderful colour and smell; bunches of aromatic herbs from mint to chamomile and cilantro; huge, round cheeses reminiscent of Holland and small golden jars of wild honey; fish, fresh and smoked, hanging from wooden stands with their pungent seaside smell; small piles of oval eggs in the most beautiful grey and blue shaded shells... and everywhere the classic market vendor, in cap and scarf against the cold, calling his wares loudly as you pass by, inviting you to sample...

I watched two elderly men in their thick woolen coats and hats carefully selecting carrots from a large orange pile and wondered why we, in the "west", have so avidly chosen the sterility of supermarkets with their artificial lighting and excessively controlled temperatures over this... this most wonderful of social institutions and haven of sensory delights, the traditional market...

Saturday, 23 August 2008

...Valpairaso...

I think that graffiti says a lot about a place... when all you see around you is "tag" (that awful hieroglyphic scrawl marking public walls in a macho branding reminiscent of dogs marking their territory) it is intimidating, ugly and defacing of the public spaces we share. But, when graffiti is combined with creativity, with wit, it becomes street art in the most inspiring, politically charged, humorous and anarchistic fashion. And here, in Valpairaso, a port city just north of Santiago in Chile, this sort of graffiti is abound... every wall is marked with the most talented murals, stencils, poetry, political slogans - they are a joy to see and I have spent many hours walking the streets in the search for the most creative, interesting and challenging of them.

Valpairso is a charming place - it consists of many hills which wind upwards from the central port, evoking memories of Wellington with its winding narrow streets and colourful tumbledown houses which cover the hills in a wild confusion of old and new, small and large, thin and wide. Artists, students, bohemians, poets and musicians flock here and the local craft shops are as numerous as the cosy welcoming cafes with stained glass windows and wooden chairs... it is a city that invites you to stay awhile and teases your conceptions of order, of art, of fashion, of politics. Viva Valpairaso!

Monday, 18 August 2008

Oh wild Pacific, how you smell like home...

I no longer care for cameloids; enough alpacas, llamas and vicunas! No more condors, foxes or barren landscapes of the altiplano; give me the sea!!! I want wild salty waves that crash against black rocks, whipping winds and white sea spray, I want sea animals with their round soft bodies and leathery skin, give me pelicans and albatrosses, crying sea gulls and hardened sands that crunch under foot. Give me trees, wild and green, their trunks warped by wild ocean winds, give me green mountains and skies peppered with clouds... arouse in me emotions of home as I walk this final road...

And on a dark winter's day in the Punta de Choros this is just what I found...

In a persistent but gentle rain our small dinghy pounded through Pacific surf, heading into the ocean toward Islas Damas and Choros - the waves crashing over the bow of the boat, dousing me with cold salty water. I huddled under a sheet of plastic tarpaulin to keep dry, the barrage of water from above, and from below, seeping in at every opportunity and running down the sleeves of my jacket as I held the tarpaulin above my head... as the boat heaved and crashed into the sea and my jeans clung against the skin of my legs in a cold wet embrace I felt my spirits drop... what am I doing out here in the ocean, in a tiny boat, in the middle of winter?! After a rough 40 minute journey our boat pulled into a calm bay in the Isla de Choros and, as if by some arrangement with God, the rain ceased and three seals surfaced by our boat, swimming out to sea, their bodies cresting and descending into the waves, and to the left, three swimming penguins, so small, only their heads visible above the water, but what a magical sight!

As we pulled into the cove, we looked up and laying all over the rocks were sea lions, their bodies huge with leathery wet skin, the adult males bearing huge whiskers and emitting loud calls that seemed to come from the very depths of the earth and reverberate through the cold air. Pups and mothers lounged together on the rocks, not interested at the boat of visitors, their strong and swift bodies more than capable of defence or escape. Seals joined them, smaller and lighter, with sweet, gentle faces. To see these beautiful creatures, at home in this wild clime, made all the discomfort of the journey worthwhile and how my spirits soared! Our boat continued around the bays, greeted by families of Humboldt penguins, small and rotund, nesting in the rocks to protect their eggs and chicks, small and grey and fluffy. Their little bodies waddle as they walk around, heads bobbing as if in continual greetings, but in the water what grace they possess, what speed! Rubbing on rocks in the middle of the ocean we found sea otters, cats of the sea, with beautiful long whiskers, and bodies sleek and quick. They have faces with such expressions and groom themselves, rubbing against the rough rock, like cats on carpet in the sunshine - darting into the water and catching small fish with such agility! They are nervous of humans and allow us only a few minutes to observe them before retreating to the sea where they camouflage in the brown floating sea weeds.

Pelicans grace the skies - what amazing creatures! Their beaks huge and long, capable of carrying big fish from the sea. Albatrosses with their immense white bodies and smaller sea birds with red marking who nest in the cliffs, their droppings creating coloured patterns on the dark rocks. The smell of the salt air, the animals and the wind refreshed me, blowing all the sandy dust of the desert clean away and, after a hot shower, wearing pyjamas and big wooley socks, I felt renewed and prepared for the southwards journey down Chile's narrow coast... the final piece of this journey and the first piece of my journey home...

Thursday, 14 August 2008

To the extremes of the earth...

Leaving the warmth and greenery of eastern Bolivia, my trail to Chile led back to the extremes of Bolivian altitude and the mining city of Potosi, breathlessly sitting at 4,060 metres, surrounded by a dry, barren landscape dotted with bare mountains rich in minerals... the city of Potosi was historically the main centre for silver mining in Bolivia, its earth producing tonnes of the precious metal for European markets under the Spanish colonisation and consuming many millions of human lives with its arduous extraction.

The mines of Potosi are still producing hundreds of years later, albeit at a much slower rate, with 15,000 Bolivian workers entering deep underground six days a week in the search for tin, iron, silver and zinc in conditions not much improved since the 1500s. The city of Potosi exists solely for the mining industry, but its historic importance was beautifully apparent with narrow cobbled streets, Spanish tiled architecture and imposing stone churches, unfortunately much of which is now solely a facade, the city seems to be crumbling from within. The first morning I awoke in my freezing cold concrete hostel room and peeped out of the window to see sheets of snow falling from the sky and gently blanketing the courtyard... the sight was beautiful, but in a city with no heating or insulation and precarious amounts of hot water it made for painfully numb feet and I rushed out to buy a big alpaca scarf for extra warmth! Heading underground to experience the town's major mine, Cerro Rico, seemed a better idea than staying in the cold city, but as we equipped ourselves in protective clothing, boots, helmets and lamps with scarves wrapped over our mouth and nose, I began to feel pangs of fear at the conditions we were to be entering.

The entrance to the mine is a squared tunnel in the side of a mountain, stretching as far as you can see into blackness with puddles of muddy water on the ground, evoking a very medieval feeling as we hunched over and headed into the enveloping blackness... the mines are now operated by "co-operatives" which sound very equitable, but in reality the co-operative members are very few and most of the miners work as "assistants" with no legal protection, or social security, in conditions that are truly horrific. The mines are full of extremely dangerous substances, the roof of the hollowed out tunnels coated with white crystallised arsenic and cyanide and the miners wear no protective clothing or masks - the average life span of a miner is a horrifyingly short 40 years: the main cause of death? Respiratory disease caused from the toxic substances they are breathing into the delicate tissue of their lungs for eight hours every day.

Children are also working in these mines, some as young as 10 years old, they are paid 25 Bolivianos for an eight hour day (about $4) working six day weeks with no access to fresh air or sunlight. The psychological impact of this underground life must be immense; as we descended further into the mine through tiny tunnels the psychological effects greeted me; the lack of oxygen, the dust, the darkness and the tiny spaces bring an immense claustrophobia and I began to panic, feeling that I couldn't get enough oxygen into my lungs. "Calm down, breathe slowly and deeply" I told myself, trying not to let the panic overcome my logic, the fumes from the mining chemicals rising upwards toward us and the process of breathing through the cloth over my nose and mouth became even more difficult. How can these people work in these conditions, all day, every day of their artificially short lives?

The adult miners are paid 350 Bolivianos per week, apparently a very good salary for Bolivia, and above the national average. Combined with a lack of alternatives, the miners are forced to accept horrific conditions and an early death for immediate financial assistance for their families. The mine has no expert geologists or technicians, the tunnels are created by using dynamite and the same method is used in the search for mineral veins in the rock - no maps for the mine exist, and the miners use their experience to judge where is safe to create a new tunnel. Obviously this is extraordinarily dangerous and cave-ins are not uncommon; we had to sign a disclaimer before entering acknowledging our knowledge of this, and acknowledging that in the case of a cave-in we would be in as much danger as the miners... (this knowledge was not comforting as we crawled through tiny dark tunnels struggling with the heat, dust and fumes). Nearly 30 metres inside the mine my claustrophobic limit was at capacity and the panic rose in my chest as I thought of how far from the surface I was and how my lungs were struggling for oxygen. In a tunnel about 30cm high I turned to our assistant and said "por favor, quiero salir!!" - I was guided out, stumbling urgently toward the entrance in the immediacy of my brain's struggle for open spaces and air. I was not alone, nearly half our group met their mental capacity and had to be brought out and as we sat back in our bus, shaking with cold and watching the snow, I felt dumbstruck at the conditions of this place, akin to hell for me, and the knowledge that thousands of people, and children, every day enter these conditions to work for what would barely buy two cups of coffee at a tourist restaurant.

The minerals collected from the mines are transported to "refining" stations on the outskirts of the city where, through a process using numerous heavy chemicals, the minerals are separated from rock in ancient machines, rivers of waste chemicals running below in a strange orange tinted fluid, which are then dumped into the local river dubbed "Rio Negro" (black river) which then flows into larger rivers in Bolivia, and onto Brazil and Argentina. Environmental protection laws, and the enforcement of these laws, simply lack in Bolivia to prevent this abhorrent practice which will cause massive environmental contamination for hundreds of years to come. The perpetrators of these heinous environmental crimes? International companies like Rio Tinto who practice much higher standards of protection in other countries whose legislation controls their behaviour. Contemplating this makes me realise with even more clarity the necessity for international environmental legislation relating to the extraction of natural resources and the associated chemical use as this clearly shows how the impacts of contamination are an international issue and the companies involved in resource extraction simply will not regulate themselves if it will increase their profit line.

I was glad to leave the cold of Potosi, and the disturbing experience of the mines and left in high spirits bouncing over a rough dirt road for the seven hour journey to Uyuni, a tiny railway town that sits on the edge of the Salar de Uyuni, the great salt flats of Bolivia. The salt flats stretch a blindingly white 12,000 sq km distance, the salt lying seven metres deep in this millenia old lake high in the mountains linking Bolivia, Argentina and Chile. Uyuni is a dry, cold and barren town, the temperatures plummeting below 0 every night, leaving us with water pipes frozen shut in the morning and hovering over the gas stove in the hostel kitchen as our only source of warmth making bowls of porridge and cups of hot coca tea. We left Uyuni with a guide and 4WD to take us over the salt flats and through the desert to Chile, a three day journey through extreme climes and extreme landscapes - beautiful, but inhospitable, and very tough on the body as the mercury soared to 30 degrees in the day time and plunged to -20 at night with howling winds that have shape the desert rock into strange formations. We passed lagoons of beautiful colours and flocks of pink flamingos, framed with huge Dali-esqe mountains whose shadows make dark and warped patterns across the yellow sand. After three days in this environment reaching Chile felt wonderful and shortly past the border the broken, bumpy dirt path turned into a beautiful smooth tarseiled road winding its way 2,500 metres down into the Northern-Chilean desert and to hot showers, real coffee, muesli and yoghurt! I am now headed south towards Chile's famous lakes, forests, wild Pacific seas and the home of those most wonderful Chilean thinkers, Pablo Neruda and Salvador Allende...

Goodbye Bolivia, I won't forget your shocking contrasts, your wild diversity or your heartbreaking disparities.

Wednesday, 6 August 2008

A note on coca

"La sagrada hoja", the sacred leaf, this small green plant, the source of such controversy. The official nemeses of the United States and now even under attack from the United Nations... what enemies to have... but, the defence of this supplement is strong here in Bolivia, and increasingly in Peru, where it has been used as a health product and medicine for time immemorial. The leaf is used here mainly as a "mate" (like a herbal tea) or it is directly chewed in the mouth, comical to see men working with huge bulges of coca leaf in their cheeks, and is a wonderful medicine for the prevention of altitude sickness, for hunger and fatigue and as a nutritional supplement - coca, in its natural leaf form, has two to three times more calcium than milk, has more protein than walnuts, has large amounts of vitamin A and E, is rich in iron and potassium, helps to regulate glucose levels in the blood and can be made into a poultice for the alleviation of rheumatism and bone dislocation! A perfect product for the health supplement markets in the west, and wonderful for vegetarians, vegans, travellers and mountaineers. If only it could be viewed with a dose of perspective, and its attack from the United States could be reassessed.

The difference between coca, and cocaine, is as huge as the difference between sugar cane and vodka. The coca leaf is pressed to make a paste which is then processed using an enormous number of chemicals (including white gasoline) to produce the drug cocaine - the largest consumers of which reside in the United Kingdom and the United States and coincidentally, not in Latin America. Coca was mainly cultivated for its domestic use in the Andes for decades, the centre for cocaine production being in the equatorial climes of Colombia, until, ironically, in the 1980s young Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada began the application of US economist, Jeffrey Sachs' neoliberal shock treatments to the struggling Bolivian economy which included the privatisation of the nation's mines and the dismissal of some 45,000 mine workers and 35,000 factory workers who were forced to work through the "informal economy" to survive, mainly on coca farms, to supply the rising demand in Colombia for coca paste (which responded to the rising demand in the US for cocaine) - coca paste became the country's most profitable export in the 1980s (exceeding the total legal exports) and actually cushioned the falling economy which crashed following the application of the neoliberal economic policies.

The United States of America first declared its "war on drugs" under George H Bush, now being continued by George W Bush, with a horrifyingly myopic vision - the destruction of all coca in Latin America. This war has been fought with a very similar mentality to America's other international war, that on "terror" - with disproportionate use of violence and military might and very little analysis of the long term effects. Coca farms were systematically destroyed by US funded military attacks, including the murder of farmers defending their livelihoods, and the "alternative development" they have been offered is enough to make one laugh. The farmers are instructed to plant fruit in place of their coca crop, usually bananas, which then have no market, as the US refuses to buy them, and when the protesting farmers dump their rotting produce onto the roads to highlight the ineffectiveness of this "alternative" the military attacks them - leaving one Bolivian farmer legless after being shot for his protest.

Perhaps a better "war on drugs" is fought by firstly examining the ever escalating demand for cocaine in our societies? The $30 billion spent so far in this "war on peasant farmers" could have funded some genuine analytical research into the rising demand for hard drugs, and into drug prevention and rehabilitation programmes, in the USA and UK. For, as anyone with a basic understanding of the law of markets is aware, whenever a demand exists, a supply will always follow, especially when that demand is for a very high value product. What are we lacking in our societies that drives us to need to consume drugs in such a relentless manner? Perhaps a little meaning anyone?

Coca, the sacred leaf, is not the enemy. Coca could be a wonderful export commodity for its health properties, it could act as a high value export product for Bolivia, the poorest nation in Latin America, and at the same time benefit western consumers. If only our governments and international institutions could take a good dose of perspective. Meanwhile, I will continue to enjoy my daily cup of coca tea until I reach the border!