Pubdate: Sun, 19 Nov 2000 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2000 The New York Times Company Contact: 229 West 43rd Street, New York, NY 10036 Fax: (212) 556-3622 Website: http://www.nytimes.com/ Forum: http://forums.nytimes.com/comment/ Author: Barbara Crossette ITALIAN SOCIOLOGIST'S GOAL: MAKE OPIUM FARMING FADE INTO HISTORY TASHKENT, Uzbekistan--Like the other former Soviet republics on the drug route dubbed the New Silk Road, Tajikistan lacks the resources to combat the flow of narcotics from neighboring Afghanistan en route to Russia and Western Europe. Afghanistan is now the world's largest producer of opium, the base of a multibillion-dollar international heroin trade that feeds European addiction. If Pino Arlacchi has anything to do with it, however, opium should become as much part of history in Afghanistan as it now is in Thailand, which is getting ready to open a museum of opium. Mr. Arlacchi, a 49-year-old Italian sociologist and expert on organized crime, became the United Nations' top antinarcotics official three years ago. Years of studying and writing about the Italian Mafia, he said, convinced him that the war on narcotics does not have to be fought with armies and tens of millions of dollars. As he spoke, Mr. Arlacchi (pronounced are-LOCK-key), was flying over the snow-covered peaks that separate Uzbekistan from Tajikistan, on his way to open a new, experimental drug-control agency established with United Nations help in the Tajik capital, Dushanbe. Over the last year, the fledging Tajik agency and a force of 11,000 Russian border guards have reported seizing about 1.3 tons of heroin from Afghanistan and Pakistan. This is equivalent to amounts intercepted in Europe or the United States, Mr. Arlacchi said. Opium poppy cultivation on a significant scale is now found in only three countries: Afghanistan, Myanmar and Laos. With the help of a $60 million international fund, Laos promises to be free of opium in five years, Mr. Arlacchi said. Myanmar, formerly Burma, is down to 60 percent of recent production because of pressure from neighboring Southeast Asian nations. Vietnam and China have also slashed opium growing. Law enforcement is not the only, or even the most important, part of trying to convince poor farmers to stop producing narcotics, Mr. Arlacchi said. "First of all, we have to convince people that organized crime is not invincible," he said, recalling similar experiences in Sicily. "We are not fighting enemies that are bigger than us." Now he is saying to skeptical governments that most narcotics production can be eliminated more cheaply than most people think. "The farmers do not get rich with opium production. In Afghanistan, at $30 a kilo of opium, you are poor even if you produce 10 kilos. The farmers get a minimal amount, so it's easy to provide them an alternative. Even with the traffickers, who are supposed to make most of the profit at origin, we're speaking about quite modest profits at the source." "So when I told people that for $25 million a year for 10 years we can eliminate opium poppy production in Afghanistan, nobody believed that," he said. "Even now, when I tell people that $3.5 million invested in technical assistance to the agency in Tajikistan and the Russian border troops there, we can block the northern heroin route, people don't believe because they are used to inflated figures." By Tajik standards, for instance, the 300 members of Tajikistan's new antidrug squad--chosen, trained and equipped by European experts--are very well paid at $100 a month in hard currency. The money, contributed by several European nations, goes directly to the squad members, not to the government, to minimize opportunities for corruption. Mr. Arlacchi argues that in an age of mass communication "every peasant in the most remote areas of Myanmar or Afghanistan knows perfectly that what he is doing is harmful for other people," and is receptive to alternatives. But, he said, alternative crops sometimes take too long to show a return, meaning that aid is needed--to people and governments. In Afghanistan, however, few foreign governments want to deal with the Taliban, preferring a "ring of security" around Afghanistan to contain the problem. Mr. Arlacchi said he is consistently refused money to work inside Afghanistan. It is also not clear how sincere the Taliban is in its pledges to halt opium production. Their militias, who now control an estimated 95 percent of Afghanistan, face hunger on a national scale and political disaster if they end opium production without offering people alternative incomes. When the Taliban order poppy production cuts, Mr. Arlacchi said he sees the edicts as "more a way to test the cost of a measure like this than a real, serious attempt to implement it." In Tajikistan, the United Nations drug-control program cultivated ties with the pro-Russian president, Emomali Rahmonov--a task that Mr. Arlacchi said was easier than getting the backing of the United States for a program that has so far spent $2.6 million. Mr. Arlacchi, a tenured professor of sociology at the University of Florence who left a safe seat in the Italian Senate to join the United Nations in 1997, is one of several outsiders hired by Secretary General Kofi Annan for their real-world expertise. The Italian newcomer ruffled feathers at the United Nations' drug program headquarters in Vienna, removing several top bureaucrats and dispatching others into the field, away from their desks. A few weeks ago, Mr. Arlacchi visited Bolivia, which is within months of declaring itself free of coca cultivation, and found the backlash against a coca ban there reminiscent of his Sicilian experience. "There was a moment," he said, "when the economy in Sicily got bad and there were demonstrations of thousands of workers against us--construction workers with billboards saying: `We want the Mafia back because the Mafia gave us jobs.' " "In Bolivia, there are very harsh times, and you get demonstrations of coca producers, cocaleros, who have exactly the same platform: `We want to go back to cultivating coca because it gives us an income,' " he said. "I told the Bolivian government that they have to be firm not giving in, but at the same time they have to listen to them and go ahead and give more resources." In Thailand, Mr. Arlacchi recalled, the king told him about a village where there was resistance to changing a water course to irrigate fields. The farmers finally admitted that redirecting the water channel was impossible because there was a ghost in the way. They asked the king, who is considered superhuman by many Thais, to deal with the ghost. He said he would, and the water soon flowed to the needy new crops--at no cost at all to the United Nations program. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh Sutcliffe