Pubdate: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 Source: Associated Press (Wire) Copyright: 2001 Associated Press Author: William J. Kole, The Associated Press U.N. HAILS DROP IN OPIUM FARMING VIENNA, Austria (AP) - International efforts to discourage farmers in Afghanistan from growing opium - a suspected cash crop for Osama bin Laden's terrorism network - are paying off, the United Nations' anti-crime czar said Friday. Pino Arlacchi, executive director of the U.N. Office for Drug Control and Crime Prevention, said programs designed to get farmers to grow other crops instead of opium, which is used to make heroin, were choking off the flow of cash to terrorists. "This will dramatically reduce the movement of heroin from Afghanistan to the West," he said. Until this year, Afghanistan was the world's No. 1 source of opium and produced 4,000 tons annually - three quarters of the global supply. But there has been no sign of any new cultivation of opium poppy this year, Arlacchi said. Experts believe there are still 100 tons in storage in Afghanistan. "But stockpiles don't last forever, and if there is no production, no replanting, we will see a dramatic effect on the world market," Arlacchi said. Already, the wholesale price per kilogram has soared from $30 to $500-600, he said. To encourage programs that pay Afghan farmers to grow something else, the Bush administration recently gave the U.N. drug control agency $1.5 million. The United Nations can take only partial credit for the huge drop in opium production: Afghanistan is suffering the effects of a severe drought that has crippled all kinds of farming. And the ruling Taliban, while sheltering bin Laden and members of his al-Qaida network, last year banned growing and using opium as un-Islamic. Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said in Washington that there were strong indications that bin Laden's group has profited handsomely from the opium trade. Kerry called the addiction and crime created by heroin trafficking in the United States part of a terrorist strategy to exact "their revenge on the world ... (and) get as many people drugged out and screwed up as you can." Arlacchi also called Friday for the swift ratification of international conventions he said could help the fight against terrorism. Only three nations - Britain, Botswana and Sri Lanka - have ratified the 1999 International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism, and at least 22 countries must ratify it before it can take effect. The United States signed the measure, but Congress has not yet ratified it. Among other things, that convention eliminates the traditional notion of secrecy that banks in many countries have used as an excuse not to cooperate with investigators who are trying to pinpoint, freeze or seize terrorist funds. "These terrorists are shrewd and fanatical. They are players in the global financial markets," he said.