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DATE=3/10/2000 TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT (L-ONLY) TITLE=COLOMBIA-US AID NUMBER=2-260075 BYLINE=LETA HONG FINCHER DATELINE=WASHINGTON CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: The U-S House of Representatives will vote soon on a one-point-seven billion dollar emergency aid package to help fight drug trafficking in Colombia. The money would help strengthen the Colombian Army and support human rights and institutional reforms. But as V-O-A's Leta Hong Fincher reports, the package is generating controversy in Washington. TEXT: The chairman of the House International Relations Committee, Representative Benjamin Gilman, urged support for the bill (Friday) in a speech delivered to the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank in Washington. Mr. Gilman said Colombia matters strategically, because it is the source of 80 percent of the cocaine and 75 percent of the heroin consumed in the United States. /// GILMAN ACT /// The fate of Colombia's democratic government is of extreme importance to our nation. The anti- drug strategy that we're pursuing in Colombia is straightforward. By preventing illicit drugs from reaching our shoreline, we're protecting our citizens from their poison and undercutting the flow of drug money that arms and sustains the insurgent forces that have been destabilizing that country. /// END ACT /// Although Colombia has been plagued by drug-related violence for decades, its problems are now compounded by a severe economic crisis. Unemployment has reached 20 percent, the highest in Latin America. In addition, Colombian President Andres Pastrana is trying to negotiate a cease-fire with paramilitary groups that are financially stronger now than ever before. The Colombian ambassador to the United States, Alberto Moreno, says that U-S aid is critical to help create peace in his country. /// MORENO ACT /// Several months ago, some 10-million Colombians took to the streets in the largest public demonstration in our history, and their message was clear: No more violence, no more bloodshed and no more insecurity. /// END ACT /// U-S aid would include money to train anti-drug forces in the Colombian Army and provide them with 60 helicopters. But critics of the aid package are concerned that the United States could be dragged into a counter-insurgency war reminiscent of Vietnam. The bill does not commit U-S troops to Colombia's anti- drug battle. But Roger Noriega, who is on the staff of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, says the Clinton administration has not laid out a clear strategy for its intervention in Colombia's crisis. /// NORIEGA ACT /// You have to realize -- and we do -- that this is a serious commitment, that people are going to die. And I was in Colombia and saw the young people who frankly are going to be among the first to die, the young people training in these counter-narcotics (units). So this is deadly serious business, and it is just beginning and it is just the down payment. /// END ACT /// The House of Representatives is expected to vote on the aid package as early as next week. (signed) NEB/LHF/JP 10-Mar-2000 16:14 PM EDT (10-Mar-2000 2114 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .