Colombia's FARC rebels called on Tuesday in peace talks with the government for the regulated cultivation and sale of illegal crops like coca leaf, opium poppies and marijuana.
Rebel negotiator Pablo Catatumbo unveiled the proposal before the start of a negotiating session dealing with drug trafficking, the industry that has long fueled Colombia's brutal civil war.
He said the proposal would "regulate the production and marketing of coca leaf, poppies and marijuana, in recognition of their nutritional, medicinal, therapeutic and cultural qualities... as well as their artisanal and industrial possibilities."
He called for the de-militarization of areas where small farmers would be allowed to grow the crops under U.N. supervision, and an end to the crop eradication programs that have been a central feature of U.S.-financed counter-drug programs in Colombia.
Under the FARC's proposal, the program would be funded by the government with the savings that come from eliminating the military presence in those areas, he said.
Catatumbo denounced what he said were "criminal state policies based on the persecution, stigmatization and criminalization of peasant farmers."
There was no immediate reaction to the proposal from the government of President Juan Manuel Santos.
But the FARC initiative echoed a recent move by Uruguay to legalize and regulate the cultivation and sale of marijuana, as well as drug legalization proposals elsewhere in the Americas.
Last November, the FARC's top leader, Timoleon Jimenez, alias "Timochenko," said he was in favor of drug legalization in Colombia, arguing that eradication programs had created social problems by depriving poor farmers of a source of income.
The government, meanwhile, accuses the FARC of financing its operations through the drug trade in areas where it holds sway.
Founded in 1964, the FARC is Latin America's longest insurgency and biggest guerrilla army, with an estimated 7,000 to 8,000 fighters.
Colombia is one of the world's top producers of cocaine.
The Santos government and the FARC opened peace talks in November 2012, taking up the issue of drug trafficking in the past two months.
Negotiators have so far reached consensus on just two agenda topics -- rural development, and the rebels' participation in the country's political life once a comprehensive peace agreement is reached.
But two other agenda items have yet to be discussed: compensation for victims of the conflict and the disarmament of the rebel forces.
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