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TULARE COUNTY, Calif. - Authorities detained a 13-year-old boy who allegedly brought balloons stuffed with cocaine to his middle school in a small Central Valley town on Friday, resulting in the hospitalization of multiple students. A pair of students found two balloons, which had popped, while on a playground at Carl F. With Smith Middle School in Terra Bella, in an agricultural area about 40 miles north of Bakersfield, the Tulare County Sheriff’s Office said in a news release. The students noticed a white powdery substance on the inside and outside of the deflated balloons and reported it around 8:40 a.m.

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To staff, who called authorities. The deputies who responded performed a presumptive test on the substance, and it tested positive for cocaine, officials said. Medical personnel responded and evaluated 13 other children who had potentially been exposed to the narcotic. Nearly 300 sixth to eighth grade students attend the school. The field tests came back negative, but two of the students were taken to the hospital out of an abundance of caution, the Sheriff’s Office said. The incident alarmed parents at the school, many of whom learned of it through social media, according to the Visalia Times-Delta. “I’m very concerned for my daughter’s safety at school after today,” one mother, Maricela Madrano, told the newspaper.

A K-9 unit was used to search the campus and was able to identify the area on the playground where the balloons were initially uncovered. The K-9 also alerted deputies to a 13-year-old boy’s shorts, which wound up testing positive for drugs, investigators said. That student was detained and is being questioned on suspicion of being the one who brought the narcotics to campus. Amid the ensuing investigation, detectives turned up the source of the drugs at the boy’s home, authorities said.

The department’s narcotics enforcement team also performed additional testing on the substance, and it again returned positive results for cocaine, officials said. Sheriff’s personnel, along with a drone, performed a thorough search of the campus, but no further traces of drugs were found.

Santos said he was taking the move following a Health Ministry recommendation based on a World Health Organization decision to classify glyphosate as a carcinogen. READ MORE: Speaking at an event in the capital, Bogota, Santos said that defence and health officials should agree on a transition period, during which “spraying of glyphosate has to be replaced with other mechanisms, for example, intensifying manual eradication” of coca plants. Ambassador to Colombia, Kevin Whitaker, said a decision on whether to use the chemical is a decision for Colombia and the U.S. Government respects it.

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More than 4 million acres of land in Colombia have been sprayed with the popular weed killer over the past two decades to kill the plants whose leaves produce cocaine. The spraying program is partly carried out by U.S. The decision to end fumigation program could have a side effect of somewhat easing ongoing peace talks with the country’s main rebel group, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, which has demanded an end to the spraying as part of any deal. READ MORE: The two sides already had agreed that aerial eradication would be used only as a last resort. The presence of the rebels was a principal reason for introducing airborne coca fumigation in Colombia because guerrilla fighters long protected coca crops, making manual eradication dangerous. The other two main cocaine-producing countries, Peru and Bolivia, have avoided use of chemical herbicides, using manual eradication instead.

WATCH: 16×9’s investigation into the use of group of pesticides called neonicotinoids (NNIs) The International Agency for Research on Cancer, a French-based research arm of the World Health Organization in March reclassified the herbicide as a carcinogen. It cited evidence that the herbicide produces cancer in lab animals and more limited findings that it causes non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma in humans. Daniel Mejia, a Bogota-based economist who is chairman of an expert panel advising the Colombian government on its drug strategy, published research last year that found higher rates of skin problems and miscarriages in districts targeted by herbicides. It was based on a study of medical records from 2003 to 2007.

Monsanto and other manufacturers of glyphosate-based products strongly rejected the WHO ruling. They cited a 2012 ruling by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency that the herbicide was safe. And Colombian government officials have argued that cocaine does more health damage than aerial spraying. Defence Minister Juan Carlos Pinzon recently expressed concern about calls for a ban on spraying. “Common sense should prevail,” he said. “What cannot happen is that in the absence of a more detailed analysis, we lose tools that one way or another frankly contribute to reducing drug trafficking.” Colombia already has scaled back use of aerial herbicides in favour of more labour-intensive manual eradication efforts, partly in response to criticism by farmers.