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Posted: 5/5/2011 5:19:31 PM EST
Ramon Jesurun (R), president of Colombia's soccer league governing body Dimayor, talks with UEFA President Michel Platini during a break in a meeting of the South America Soccer Confederation (CONMEBOL), in Ypacarai April 30, 2011. Jesurun told Reuters in an interview that his country's successful war on drugs may have contributed to the dire financial positions of some domestic soccer clubs by starving them of a source of funding. Picture taken April 30. REUTERS/Jorge Adorno (COLOMBIA - Tags: SPORT SOCCER SOCIETY)
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Posted: 5/5/2011 5:19:31 PM EST
Ramon Jesurun (R), president of Colombia's soccer league governing body Dimayor, talks with UEFA President Michel Platini during a break in a meeting of the South America Soccer Confederation (CONMEBOL), in Ypacarai April 30, 2011. Jesurun told Reuters in an interview that his country's successful war on drugs may have contributed to the dire financial positions of some domestic soccer clubs by starving them of a source of funding. Picture taken April 30. REUTERS/Jorge Adorno (COLOMBIA - Tags: SPORT SOCCER SOCIETY)
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Posted: 5/5/2011 5:19:31 PM EST
Ramon Jesurun (R), president of Colombia's soccer league governing body Dimayor, talks with UEFA President Michel Platini during a break in a meeting of the South America Soccer Confederation (CONMEBOL), in Ypacarai April 30, 2011. Jesurun told Reuters in an interview that his country's successful war on drugs may have contributed to the dire financial positions of some domestic soccer clubs by starving them of a source of funding. Picture taken April 30. REUTERS/Jorge Adorno (COLOMBIA - Tags: SPORT SOCCER SOCIETY)
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Posted: 5/5/2011 5:19:31 PM EST
Ramon Jesurun (R), president of Colombia's soccer league governing body Dimayor, talks with UEFA President Michel Platini during a break in a meeting of the South America Soccer Confederation (CONMEBOL), in Ypacarai April 30, 2011. Jesurun told Reuters in an interview that his country's successful war on drugs may have contributed to the dire financial positions of some domestic soccer clubs by starving them of a source of funding. Picture taken April 30. REUTERS/Jorge Adorno (COLOMBIA - Tags: SPORT SOCCER SOCIETY)
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Posted: 5/5/2011 5:19:31 PM EST
Ramon Jesurun (R), president of Colombia's soccer league governing body Dimayor, talks with UEFA President Michel Platini during a break in a meeting of the South America Soccer Confederation (CONMEBOL), in Ypacarai April 30, 2011. Jesurun told Reuters in an interview that his country's successful war on drugs may have contributed to the dire financial positions of some domestic soccer clubs by starving them of a source of funding. Picture taken April 30. REUTERS/Jorge Adorno (COLOMBIA - Tags: SPORT SOCCER SOCIETY)
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Posted: 5/5/2011 5:19:31 PM EST
Ramon Jesurun (R), president of Colombia's soccer league governing body Dimayor, talks with UEFA President Michel Platini during a break in a meeting of the South America Soccer Confederation (CONMEBOL), in Ypacarai April 30, 2011. Jesurun told Reuters in an interview that his country's successful war on drugs may have contributed to the dire financial positions of some domestic soccer clubs by starving them of a source of funding. Picture taken April 30. REUTERS/Jorge Adorno (COLOMBIA - Tags: SPORT SOCCER SOCIETY)
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Posted: 5/5/2011 5:19:31 PM EST
Ramon Jesurun (R), president of Colombia's soccer league governing body Dimayor, talks with UEFA President Michel Platini during a break in a meeting of the South America Soccer Confederation (CONMEBOL), in Ypacarai April 30, 2011. Jesurun told Reuters in an interview that his country's successful war on drugs may have contributed to the dire financial positions of some domestic soccer clubs by starving them of a source of funding. Picture taken April 30. REUTERS/Jorge Adorno (COLOMBIA - Tags: SPORT SOCCER SOCIETY)
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Posted: 5/5/2011 5:19:31 PM EST
Ramon Jesurun (R), president of Colombia's soccer league governing body Dimayor, talks with UEFA President Michel Platini during a break in a meeting of the South America Soccer Confederation (CONMEBOL), in Ypacarai April 30, 2011. Jesurun told Reuters in an interview that his country's successful war on drugs may have contributed to the dire financial positions of some domestic soccer clubs by starving them of a source of funding. Picture taken April 30. REUTERS/Jorge Adorno (COLOMBIA - Tags: SPORT SOCCER SOCIETY)
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Posted: 5/5/2011 5:19:31 PM EST
Ramon Jesurun (R), president of Colombia's soccer league governing body Dimayor, talks with UEFA President Michel Platini during a break in a meeting of the South America Soccer Confederation (CONMEBOL), in Ypacarai April 30, 2011. Jesurun told Reuters in an interview that his country's successful war on drugs may have contributed to the dire financial positions of some domestic soccer clubs by starving them of a source of funding. Picture taken April 30. REUTERS/Jorge Adorno (COLOMBIA - Tags: SPORT SOCCER SOCIETY)
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Posted: 6/25/2008 8:54:29 PM EST
A fiberglass submarine used to smuggle cocaine is seen in Buenaventura June 24, 2008. Colombians who thought they had seen everything in the war on drugs were treated to something new this year: cocaine smuggling in a submarine. Picture taken on June 24, 2008. To match feature COLOMBIA-DRUGS/SUBMARINES REUTERS/Jaime Saldarriaga (COLOMBIA)
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Posted: 6/23/2008 10:44:11 PM EST
Inmates work on handicrafts in a prison in Quito in this January 31, 2008 file photo. From Argentina to Nicaragua, Latin Americans have elected leftist leaders over the last decade who are challenging Washington's aggressive war on drugs in the world's top cocaine-producing region. Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa, the son of a drug smuggler, has ordered parliament to pardon about 2,000 small-time couriers, one of a number of measures seen at odds with U.S. Policy. To match feature LATAM-DRUGS/ REUTERS/Guillermo Granja/Files (ECUADOR)