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DATE=4/11/2000 TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT TITLE=U-S / COLOMBIA (L ONLY) NUMBER=2-261186 BYLINE=KYLE KING DATELINE=STATE DEPARTMENT CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Colombian President Andres Pastrana is meeting with top U-S officials in Washington, in an effort to rescue a one-point-six billion dollar anti-narcotics aid package that is being held up in the U-S Senate. From the State Department, V-O-A's Kyle King reports. TEXT: President Pastrana emerged from talks with Secretary of State Madeleine Albright saying he hopes U-S aid for his country will be approved as soon as possible. The aid package has already been passed by a wide margin in the House of Representatives. But last week Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott delayed a vote on the measure, saying it could be passed later and does not need to be considered on an emergency basis. Speaking to reporters after her talks with President Pastrana, Secretary of State Albright called the issue urgent, and said the aid package needed to be approved as soon as possible. /// ALBRIGHT ACT /// We have put a great deal of effort into it, and President Pastrana himself has spent a lot of time on this, as has his ambassador here, and I think we need to move this forward. It is an urgent issue; otherwise we would not have presented it as an urgent issue. /// END ACT /// Earlier in the day, President Pastrana met with White House drug control chief Barry McCaffrey, who said a long delay in the aid package would diminish its effectiveness and could have what he called a chilling effect on other potential donors. President Pastrana also scheduled meetings with Senator Lott and other Senate leaders to discuss the aid, which would provide additional helicopters to fight drug traffickers, mostly in the south of Colombia. Production of cocaine in Colombia has more than doubled over the past few years, and violence by leftist rebels and right wing paramilitaries has increased. /// REST OPT /// Asked about television news reports that Russian organized crime gangs are now importing weapons into Colombia, President Pastrana said his government is looking into the issue. /// PASTRANA ACT /// We are investigating but we do not have the real, real evidence at this moment. We are controlling with the armed forces and police our borders, to avoid any entrance of arms or shipments to our country that are going to be used by insurgent groups, but we do not have any evidence of information that was brought (shown) on television over the weekend. /// END ACT /// Secretary of State Albright said the United States is very concerned about the acquisition of arms by the rebels in Colombia and the possibility of Russian organized crime becoming involved in the drug trade. (Signed) NEB/KBK/ENE/gm 11-Apr-2000 16:31 PM EDT (11-Apr-2000 2031 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .