Pubdate: Tue, 17 Oct 2000 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 2000 David Syme & Co Ltd Contact: 250 Spencer Street, Melbourne, 3000, Australia Website: http://www.theage.com.au/ Author: Rory McCarthy, Kurgan-tyube, Tajikistan, from The Guardian Note: Originally published in The Guardian (UK) TALIBAN TO UNLEASH A FLOOD OF REFUGEES, DRUGS A sweeping Taliban military offensive across the mountains of northern Afghanistan threatens to spark a refugee crisis and unleash a wave of Islamic insurgency and drug smuggling through central Asia. Four years after seizing power, the Taliban Islamic militia has made crucial gains in the past two months in the only area of Afghanistan still outside its control. Now with Taliban troops sitting along western parts of the 1600-kilometre border with Tajikistan, the Tajik Government and its backers in Russia are increasingly apprehensive. Tajikistan has barely recovered from a five-year civil war that began only months after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Unemployment runs at more than 50per cent and most factories have collapsed into ruin. This year a devastating drought threatens half the population. So far Tajikistan has kept its Afghan border closed, fearing the impact of a flood of refugees. Aid agencies in Dushanbe, the capital, say up to 100,000 Afghans would descend on the southern provinces, the area worst affected by drought, if the Taliban made further advances. "The large humanitarian catastrophe could be greater than that in Kosovo, one of the biggest in the world," Sergei Ivanov, the head of Russia's security council, said last week. Moscow makes no secret of its opposition to the Taliban and is keen to increase its influence in central Asia. Radical Islamic groups in Tajikistan would be inspired if the Taliban seized the remaining 10per cent of Afghanistan it does not now control. Islamic militants are believed to be moving from Afghanistan through the narrow strip in the centre of Tajikistan and north into Kyrgyzstan and the Ferghana valley, where hardliners have long wanted a separate Muslim homeland. "There is a very real threat of a spread of Islamism in Tajikistan," said an aid worker in Dushanbe. "There are a lot of different divisions of radical Islamists." One of the leading rebel groups, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, which has bases in the mountains of Tajikistan and wants to overthrow the secular Uzbek Government, was added to the US State Department's list of terror groups last month. Uzbekistan accuses one of the Tajik Government coalition partners, the United Tajik Opposition, of supporting the rebels. In August, Islamic Movement rebels fought their way to within 96kilometres of the Uzbek capital, Tashkent. In the northern Tajik province of Leninabad, the Hiz-ut Tahir movement, an Islamic group structured around small, independent cells, has been pushing for a separate state. Leninabad is cut off from the rest of the country during winter when snow blocks the only pass. Although 25,000 Russian soldiers guard the Tajik border, drug smuggling from Afghanistan, which produces 70per cent of the world's heroin, has increased five-fold this year. Rival factories in Afghanistan compete to refine the purest heroin, whose price rises dramatically on the trail through Tajikistan to Russia. Some of the most vulnerable parts of the border are guarded not by the Russian army but by soldiers from the United Tajik Opposition, the Islamic group that fought against the government in the civil war. The Taliban relies on opium production as a major source of income; this year alone it brought in at least $US9 million ($A17 million). The most immediate threat remains the drought and the danger of a flood of refugees. At least 70,000 people fled the Afghan city of Taloqan when it fell to the Taliban last month. Up to 100,000 more would flee if the Taliban took the last opposition town, Faizabad. In villages across southern Tajikistan people are on the brink of starvation. The UN's World Food Program is launching a $62 million emergency operation to feed one million of the worst-affected villagers over the next nine months. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck