Pubdate: Sat, 19 Feb 2000 Source: Examiner, The (Ireland) Copyright: Examiner Publications Ltd, 2000 Contact: http://www.examiner.ie/ IRANIAN GATEWAY FOR THE AFGHAN DRUG CONNECTION ON the wall outside of Iran's drug control agency are portraits of anti-narcotics police officers. Thirty-five in all, each picture bears the red rose of a martyr. All died in the line of duty, killed by drug traffickers. That death toll would be high enough if it was incurred in the course of a year. Those 35 lives were not lost over 12 months however, but in a single day. The men all died during a shoot out with a major drug smuggling gang in south-west Iran last month and their fate was far from unusual. Last year 193 Iranian police officers and soldiers were killed in clashes with traffickers. Buy heroin in Britain or Ireland and there is an eight in ten chance that it was originally cultivated as opium poppies in Afghanistan and if so it is all but certain that on its way to Europe it passed through Iran. The Islamic Republic is a 'transit country' for the drugs trade. Esmaeil Afshari, a director of the drug control agency, said the sheer volume of narcotics passing through the country's borders is far too great to be stopped. Iran's limited successes only illustrate the scale of the problem. Last year Iranian forces seized 253 tonnes of drugs being transported through the country. But even that haul paled in comparison to the 4,600 tonnes of opiate drugs the UN estimates that Afghanistan produces each year. And that figure according to Iranian intelligence estimates, may only be 80 per cent of the real total. While most of the traffic passes on to distant markets, more than enough stays in Iran itself. The Iranian government estimates that there are more than two million drug users among Iran's 65 million people of whom 1.2 million are clinically addicted. Most are opium users and the interior ministry estimates they are responsible for up to half of all crime in Iran. Perhaps surprisingly for a country with a tradition of strict abstention and a harsh penal code, Iran's approach to addiction is relatively sympathetic with help provided through 55 state-funded rehabilitation clinics. Understanding or not there is little opportunity to ask the addicts themselves. Foreign journalists are not encouraged to visit the clinics. "It might not be understood. It might not be safe," says one police official in response to an inquiry. Iran's struggle to keep out the substances that fuel the addicts' habits has left its border with Afghanistan resembling a war zone. Deep trenches have been dug, barbed wire fences erected and heavily fortified, watch towers built. In all 30,000 Iranian troops are deployed along the border with Afghanistan and Pakistan. But the frontier is over 1,200 miles long and even when Iranian forces do intercept drug smugglers in the vast rocky plains and mountainous valleys they often find themselves outnumbered and out-gunned. According to Mr Afshari, the drug gangs are able to buy even the most powerful weapons in the arms bazaars of Central Asia. "They travel in caravans of dozens of cars, and the security cars have heavy weapons. They have heavy machine guns, RPG-7 rocket launchers, and they have even used Stinger missiles to shoot down our helicopters." Nor do the people of the border provinces escape the traffickers, who often force residents to transport drugs or face execution. Kidnapping is also commonplace. A group of Portuguese scientists abducted in Kerman province last month were simply the most high profile victims of recent times. Eventually released unharmed, they had been seized by a drug baron demanding his son be released from an Iranian jail. The younger man had been arrested after being found driving a truck carrying over a tonne of opium. The scientists were among the lucky ones. Iran estimates around 2000 cases of kidnapping take place along the border every year and not all those abducted survive. Mohammed Nasser Tava-solizadah, an MP for one of the frontier provinces, says people there live "in a state of constant terror" because of the drug gangs. "If the people don't obey the smugglers they or their families will be killed." To defend residents, he has called on the Iranian government to allow the formation of local armed militia groups. However, Mr Afshari said responsibility for blocking the flow of drugs also rests with the international community and particularly those states where the drugs end their journey. For the most part that means Europe, as raw opiates is shipped through Iran to Turkey were it is refined and smuggled through the Balkans into the European Union. Drugs are also smuggled to the Gulf states with Oman a common staging point. Britain has responded to that call recently donating body armour and night vision goggles to Iran's drug police as well as giving pounds 1.2 million in direct aid. But that, says Mr Afshari, is a drop in the ocean. "Iran spends $70 million every year on fighting drugs. We get less than $4 million every year from the United Nations." The UN has set a deadline of 2008 for a substantial reduction if not total halt to international drug flows but according to one Iranian diplomat "If we don't get more help that deadline is just a joke. If anything the drug trade will grow. Afghan production rose by 20 per cent last year and it just keeps growing. "As well as helping control the border, Iran says the world must also help wean Afghan farmers off cultivating opiates. Two decades of conflict and upheaval has left Afghanistan one of the world's poorest nations and destroyed the country's agriculture. Not that the impoverished peasants farming poppies see much of the profits from their labours: a kilogram of opium sells for $15 in Afghanistan but by the time it reaches Tehran it brings $1,000. Even that is a fraction of its final street price in Europe with the huge mark up filtering back to cartels Tehran says are based in Turkey and the former Soviet Union. Mr Afshari insists that the drugs barons will only get richer until Iran gets more help from the rest of the world. "Europe says it guards its borders from drugs. But it must learn that when it comes to drugs its borders are not in Europe but here in Iran. "We are sending our sons to guard that border and they are giving their lives. At least Europe could give them the equipment they need." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake