Pubdate: Mon, 22 Jan 2001 Source: Agence France-Presses Copyright: AFP 2001 AFGHANISTAN, MYANMAR TOP DRUGS BLACKLIST - UN REPORT Afghanistan, Myanmar and Colombia are by far the world's biggest producers of heroin and cocaine, supplying an overall market of some 180 million people worldwide, a UN report said Monday. But the report, by the United Nations Office for Drug Control and Crime Prevention (UNDCP), welcomed crackdowns by many other countries which have cut supplies substantially. "Thanks to a 'get-serious' approach on the part of most major coca and opium poppy producing countries, production is now limited to fewer countries than ever before," said the report. "Afghanistan and Myanmar together account for about 90 percent of global illicit opium production, and Colombia alone is responsible for two-thirds of global coca leaf production," it said. But the UN report noted that production of the world's two "main problem drugs", cocaine and heroin, was on the downturn. Between 1993 and 1999, the coca leaf harvests and cocaine production fell by some 20 percent, and in the last year the production of opium, heroin's key ingredient, has fallen by 17 percent, according to the report. And, it added, the number of consumers picking up the finished product has stabilized or even declined. In the late 1990s, some 4.2 percent of the world's population over 15 -- 180 million people -- were consuming drugs. Poverty reduction, conflict resolution and mediation must play a role in the reduction and eradication of drug production, the report said. The Colombian authorities' crackdown on the country's drug trade, which would deal a major blow to rebel political forces financed by drug sales, has some critics worried it will exacerbate a conflict that has claimed an estimated 130,000 lives since 1964. In Afghanistan, fears are mounting that a ban on opium cultivation could spur the exodus of refugees already fleeing drought and war. Afghan farmers say growing other crops won't meet the rising cost of living, and warn they will move their production to neighbouring Pakistan. Alternative development projects are one way for countries to climb out of this situation, and the report pointed to the "success" of such projects in Bolivia, Pakistan and Thailand. In the West, the report noted that the consumption of cocaine in the United States had fallen by a large 70 percent from 1985 to 1999, with a 40 percent reduction in overall drug use. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek