Pubdate: Thu, 21 Sep 2000 Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2000 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Contact: PO Box 120191, San Diego, CA, 92112-0191 Fax: (619) 293-1440 Website: http://www.uniontrib.com/ Forum: http://www.uniontrib.com/cgi-bin/WebX Author: Christopher S. Wren, New York Times News Service UNITED NATIONS ENDS BID TO HALT AFGHAN FARMERS' OPIUM-GROWING UNITED NATIONS -- Frustrated by declining support from Western donors and the indifference of the ruling Taliban, the United Nations is winding down efforts to persuade farmers in Afghanistan, the world's largest producer of opium, to switch to alternative, legal crops. Ghorak, Khakrez and Maiwand -- three districts of Qandahar province where the United Nations set up pilot programs promoting alternative crops -- have recorded decreases in poppy cultivation of at least 50 percent, according to the latest annual survey of the U.N. International Drug Control Program. "This demonstrates that the alternative development projects work very well," said the program's executive director, Undersecretary-General Pino Arlacchi. Similar programs in Bolivia and Peru, he noted, led to sharp declines in the cultivation of coca, the plant used to make cocaine. But despite U.N. efforts to persuade Afghan farmers to switch to wheat and other food crops in return for compensation, Arlacchi said, "Afghanistan remains by far the largest opium supplier in the world." Now, with U.N. funding running out and opium still Afghanistan's leading cash crop, the pilot projects will end this year, Arlacchi said, "given lack of financial and political support." Afghanistan's production of opium, the essential raw ingredient of heroin, was estimated at just over 3,600 tons this year, a decline from the record 5,100 tons in 1999. But the drop was caused mainly by a severe drought in southern Afghanistan, not by any effort of the Taliban to make poor farmers grow something other than opium poppies. A previous decree that farmers reduce their areas under opium cultivation by one-third has been widely ignored by the farmers and the Taliban authorities. Half of Afghanistan's opium is consumed as heroin by addicts in neighboring Pakistan and Iran, Arlacchi said. The rest is smuggled to heroin markets in Europe, usually via Turkey and the Balkans. Afghanistan planted nearly 203,000 acres in opium poppies this year, a slight decline from last year, again apparently because of bad weather. U.N. officials hoped that the drought might encourage some farmers to revert to traditional crops. But the poor harvest may leave indebted farmers with no choice but to keep raising opium. Opium growing is encouraged by Afghanistan's rugged, often remote terrain and a long-running civil war that has bred lawlessness and defiance of authority. Afghan farmers can earn about $14 per pound of opium, considerably more than they do from other crops, U.N. officials say. Roughly 10 pounds of raw opium is used to produce 1 pound of heroin. At the consuming end, the cost of a pound of uncut heroin in Europe or the United States can exceed $40,000. Opium poppies are grown in 22 of Afghanistan's 32 provinces, but six provinces in the south account for 92 percent of the opium-producing area. Moreover, 97 percent of this land is irrigated, proof that precious water is diverted to opium poppies at the expense of other crops. The Taliban, a militant Islamic movement that fought its way into power, controls an estimated 91 percent of the Afghan villages visited by U.N. surveyors, compared with 9 percent controlled by opposition forces in the north. And the Taliban's territory contains 96 percent of the country's opium poppy fields, up from about 90 percent last year. Arlacchi visited Afghanistan three years ago and secured assurances of cooperation from the Taliban, which considers drug use contrary to Islamic precepts, at least in theory. Since then, he said, "There was no substantial improvement in our relationship." The U.N. drug-control office will continue its annual survey of Afghanistan's opium cultivation and harvest yield, conducted by Afghan nationals who have been able to move about the country and interview opium growers and local officials. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D