Afghan Opium Cultivation Hits a Record
By FISNIK ABRASHI (Associated Press Writer)
From Associated Press
August 16, 2006 11:55 AM EDT
KABUL, Afghanistan - Opium cultivation in Afghanistan has hit
record levels - up by more than 40 percent from 2005 - despite
hundreds of millions in counternarcotics money, Western
officials told The Associated Press.
The increase could have serious repercussions for an already
grave security situation, with drug lords joining the
Taliban-led fight against Afghan and international forces.
A Western anti-narcotics official in Kabul said about 370,650
acres of opium poppy was cultivated this season - up from
257,000 acres in 2005 - citing their preliminary crop
projections. The previous record was 323,700 acres in 2004,
according to the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime.
"It is a significant increase from last year ... unfortunately,
it is a record year," said a senior U.S. government official
based in Kabul, who like the other Western officials would speak
only on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive topic.
Final figures, and an estimate of the yield of opium resin from
the poppies, will be clear only when the U.N. agency completes
its assessment of the crop, based on satellite imagery and
ground surveys. Its report is due in September.
The U.N. reported last year that Afghanistan produced an
estimated 4,500 tons of opium - enough to make 450 tons of
heroin - nearly 90 percent of world supply.
This year's preliminary findings indicate a failure in attempts
to eradicate poppy cultivation and continuing corruption among
provincial officials and police - problems acknowledged by
President Hamid Karzai.
Karzai told Fortune magazine in a recent interview that "lots of
people" in his administration profited from the narcotics trade
and that he had underestimated the difficulty of eradicating
opium production.
The U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime estimate that opium accounted
for 52 percent of Afghanistan's gross domestic product in 2005.
"Now what they have is a narco-economy. If they do not get
corruption sorted they can slip into being a narco-state," the
U.S. official warned.
Opium cultivation has surged since the ouster of the Taliban in
late 2001. The former regime enforced an effective ban on poppy
growing by threatening to jail farmers - virtually eradicating
the crop in 2000.
But Afghan and Western counternarcotics officials say
Taliban-led militants are now implicated in the drug trade,
encouraging poppy cultivation and using the proceeds to help
fund their insurgency.
"(That) kind of revenue from that kind of crop aids and abets
the enemy," Chief Master Sgt. Curtis L. Brownhill, a senior
adviser to the head of the U.S. Central Command, during a recent
visit to Afghanistan. "They count on having that sort of
resource and money."
Afghanistan has seen its deadliest bout of fighting this year
since U.S.-backed forces toppled the Taliban for harboring Osama
bin Laden. Officials believe the insurgency, most vicious in the
south - Afghanistan's main poppy belt - includes die-hard
Taliban, warlords and drug lords and smugglers.
Fears of fanning the insurgency has constrained efforts to
destroy the poppy crops of impoverished farmers - particularly
in Helmand, where the area being cultivated for poppies has
increased most sharply. The province now accounts for more than
40 percent of the poppy cultivation nationwide.
"We know that if we start eradicating the whole surface of poppy
cultivation in Helmand, we will increase the activity of the
insurgency and increase the number of insurgents," said Tom
Koenigs, the top U.N. official in Afghanistan.
He said the international community needs to provide alternative
livelihoods for farmers, but warned against expecting quick
results. "The problem has increased, and the remedy has to
adjust," he told reporters recently.
Since the fall of the Taliban, the international community, led
by the U.S. and Britain, has invested hundreds of millions of
dollars to combat the drugs trade.
There have been some successes. Nangahar province, with the help
of a strong governor and police chief, reduced opium output by
96 percent in 2005. Since March, anti-drug police units have
raided 10 drug labs throughout the country, seizing 2,700 pounds
of heroin and nearly 1,763 pounds of opium.
Next week, the Afghan government will present a wide-ranging
anti-drugs strategy. Officials are moving to amend laws, train
judges and prosecutors, build high security prisons and
establish special courts for drug barons and senior drug
smugglers.
This year's increased poppy cultivation follows a 21 percent
drop the previous year, suggesting the government has not
followed through on warnings to farmers against planting
poppies. Although 37,065 acres of poppies were eradicated this
year, according to the Ministry for Counternarcotics, a campaign
by police to destroy crops fell short of expectation.
Gen. Khodaidad, a top official at the ministry, said virtually
all cultivated land in Helmand - including government-owned land
- has been planted with opium poppies.
"We expected a large number (crop) this year but Helmand
unfortunately exceeded even our predictions," the U.S. official
said.
Sent by Mr. Millot, Fort Lauderdale, Florida
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Record Opium Cultivation in Afghanistan Is a Threat to Central
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United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime Web Site.
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