Record Year for Aghan Opium Crop (again)
Aug 27, 2007 21:40:50 GMT -5
Post by Disgruntled70sHab on Aug 27, 2007 21:40:50 GMT -5
Thought the eradication of poppies was one of the NATO's newest tasks. Seems it's larger than they can handle despite what successes Afghan President Hamid Karzai cited in a CTV interview.
Afghan opium production hits record; UN blames insurgency, corruption
By FISNIK ABRASHI
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) - Afghan opium poppy cultivation exploded to a record high this year, with the multibillion-dollar trade fuelled by the Taliban insurgency and corrupt officials in President Hamid Karzai's government, a UN report said Monday.
Afghanistan has opium growing on 193,000 hectares of land, a 17 per cent increase from last year's then-record 165,000 hectares, according to an annual survey by the United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime. (Note the successive record crops)
"The situation is dramatic and getting worse by the day," said Antonio Maria Costa, the UNODC's executive director.
The country now accounts for 93 per cent of the global production of opium, the raw material for heroin, and has doubled its output since two years ago, the report said.
"No other country in the world has ever had such a large amount of farmland used for illegal activity, beside China 100 years ago," when it was a major opium producer, Costa said in an interview in Kabul.
The report did not say how much of the opium gets made into heroin in Afghanistan before being smuggled out. However, an RCMP official said earlier this month that heroin made from Afghan opium now accounts for 60 per cent of the illicit drug on Canadian streets.
Karzai last year rejected U.S. offers to spray this year's crop after Afghans said the herbicide could affect livestock, crops and water supplies - fears the U.S. calls unfounded.
Costa said the UN supports the government's position, but added that crop eradication was a key element of any strategy to combat its growth.
Afghanistan is on track to produce 8,100 tonnes of opium this year, up 34 per cent from 6,000 tonnes in 2006, Costa said.
The farm value of Afghanistan's annual crop is about US$1 billion, the UN survey said. The street value of the heroin produced from it is many times higher.
While the number of poppy-free provinces in the country's north has increased from six in 2006 to 13 in 2007, production in the insurgency-hit southern provinces has exploded to unprecedented levels.
In Helmand province alone, 103,000 hectares are under cultivation accounting for more than half of the national total.
"The government has lost control of this territory because of the presence of the insurgents, because of the presence of the terrorists, whether Taliban or splinter al-Qaida groups," Costa said.
Before it was driven from power in the U.S. invasion in 2001, the Taliban strongly curbed opium cultivation. Now it uses money from the drug trade to help finance the insurgency.
"It is clearly documented now that insurgents actively promote or allow and then take advantage of the cultivation, refining and the trafficking of opium," Costa said.
Taliban rebels levy a tax on farmers and also provide protection for convoys smuggling opium into neighbouring countries, Costa said.
Some 3.3 million of Afghanistan's estimated 25 million people are involved in producing the opium, according to the report.
Costa said there was a "tremendous amount of collusion" between traffickers and government officials.
"The government's benign tolerance of corruption is undermining the future: no country has ever built prosperity on crime," Costa said in a summary of the report.
Gen. Khodaidad, Afghanistan's acting counter-narcotics minister, acknowledged that the counter-narcotics strategy has failed in the country's south and west, which he blamed on bad local officials, poor policing, failure in eradication and open borders with Iran to the west and Pakistan to the east.
Khodaidad, who like many Afghans goes by only one name, said the government needs to review its strategy at an upcoming national conference Wednesday.
He said inefficient and corrupt local officials should be threatened with dismissal and those who curbed the production and trade should be rewarded.
The link
Afghan opium production hits record; UN blames insurgency, corruption
By FISNIK ABRASHI
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) - Afghan opium poppy cultivation exploded to a record high this year, with the multibillion-dollar trade fuelled by the Taliban insurgency and corrupt officials in President Hamid Karzai's government, a UN report said Monday.
Afghanistan has opium growing on 193,000 hectares of land, a 17 per cent increase from last year's then-record 165,000 hectares, according to an annual survey by the United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime. (Note the successive record crops)
"The situation is dramatic and getting worse by the day," said Antonio Maria Costa, the UNODC's executive director.
The country now accounts for 93 per cent of the global production of opium, the raw material for heroin, and has doubled its output since two years ago, the report said.
"No other country in the world has ever had such a large amount of farmland used for illegal activity, beside China 100 years ago," when it was a major opium producer, Costa said in an interview in Kabul.
The report did not say how much of the opium gets made into heroin in Afghanistan before being smuggled out. However, an RCMP official said earlier this month that heroin made from Afghan opium now accounts for 60 per cent of the illicit drug on Canadian streets.
Karzai last year rejected U.S. offers to spray this year's crop after Afghans said the herbicide could affect livestock, crops and water supplies - fears the U.S. calls unfounded.
Costa said the UN supports the government's position, but added that crop eradication was a key element of any strategy to combat its growth.
Afghanistan is on track to produce 8,100 tonnes of opium this year, up 34 per cent from 6,000 tonnes in 2006, Costa said.
The farm value of Afghanistan's annual crop is about US$1 billion, the UN survey said. The street value of the heroin produced from it is many times higher.
While the number of poppy-free provinces in the country's north has increased from six in 2006 to 13 in 2007, production in the insurgency-hit southern provinces has exploded to unprecedented levels.
In Helmand province alone, 103,000 hectares are under cultivation accounting for more than half of the national total.
"The government has lost control of this territory because of the presence of the insurgents, because of the presence of the terrorists, whether Taliban or splinter al-Qaida groups," Costa said.
Before it was driven from power in the U.S. invasion in 2001, the Taliban strongly curbed opium cultivation. Now it uses money from the drug trade to help finance the insurgency.
"It is clearly documented now that insurgents actively promote or allow and then take advantage of the cultivation, refining and the trafficking of opium," Costa said.
Taliban rebels levy a tax on farmers and also provide protection for convoys smuggling opium into neighbouring countries, Costa said.
Some 3.3 million of Afghanistan's estimated 25 million people are involved in producing the opium, according to the report.
Costa said there was a "tremendous amount of collusion" between traffickers and government officials.
"The government's benign tolerance of corruption is undermining the future: no country has ever built prosperity on crime," Costa said in a summary of the report.
Gen. Khodaidad, Afghanistan's acting counter-narcotics minister, acknowledged that the counter-narcotics strategy has failed in the country's south and west, which he blamed on bad local officials, poor policing, failure in eradication and open borders with Iran to the west and Pakistan to the east.
Khodaidad, who like many Afghans goes by only one name, said the government needs to review its strategy at an upcoming national conference Wednesday.
He said inefficient and corrupt local officials should be threatened with dismissal and those who curbed the production and trade should be rewarded.
The link