LIMA, (Reuters) – Peru’s Congress unanimously passed legislation yesterday that would allow the military to shoot down unauthorized aircraft suspected of smuggling narcotics, a policy banned in 2001 that the United States has opposed.
The measure aims to clamp down on a growing number of flights carrying cocaine cargos out of Peru. Peru and the United States estimate that most of the country’s cocaine is now sent abroad in small planes.
The opposition-introduced legislation passed with the votes of all 89 lawmakers present, including those of the ruling party.
President Ollanta Humala must sign the bill in order for it to become law. His government said in March that it might back the measure, even though it threatens joint anti-drug efforts with the United States and millions in aid.
The United States prohibited funding linked to shoot-down activities after a Peruvian military jet coordinating with the CIA fired at a plane carrying missionaries in 2001, killing a U.S. woman and her baby. Peru also banned the policy after the incident.
The U.S. embassy in Lima said it could not comment on the vote on Thursday.
U.S. officials have lobbied Peru to maintain the status quo, Peruvian authorities have said.
Peru is the world’s top cocaine producer, according to the U.S. State Department, which estimates that small planes moved up to 180 tonnes of cocaine from Peru in the first 10 months of 2014.