Pubdate: Mon, 12 Nov 2001 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2001 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division, Hearst Newspaper Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198 Page: 1 Author: Michael Hedges HEROIN LIKELY AIDING TALIBAN EFFORT Drug Trade Provides Afghan Rulers With Funds, Corrupts Their Enemies QUETTA, Pakistan -- Under a gray moon dimmed by fog and exhaust pollution, small clumps of heroin users sag against Muslim tombstones or sprawl across unmarked graves at a walled cemetery where this city's addict population has been sequestered by police. One man, sickened by a miscalculated dose, retches loudly, the sound mingling with the howling of feral dogs. Others not yet dazed by the pure narcotics available go through the rituals of preparing the grainy powder to smoke or inject while huddled under filthy blankets. Times are harder than usual for the junkies here just a few miles from the Afghan border. The price of heroin has more than tripled since the beginning of the year, from 15 rupees, or about 25 cents, to 50 rupees for one dose. "The Taliban did not allow the poppies to be grown this year," says Abdullah, a 32-year-old Afghan refugee. Others see a different cause. "The bombing is giving the Taliban too much trouble, so the heroin is not coming from there so much," says Asad Dhul, another Afghan who has found a community of sorts in a small cave at one end of the acres-long cemetery. The inflated heroin prices are typical of many parts of the world, experts say. And, as the Quetta heroin users suspect, actions by Afghanistan's ruling Taliban militia have influenced the price of the drug, said United States and United Nations officials. But the story of the Taliban's role in controlling the world's heroin supply, and therefore the global price, is a lot more complicated than it may first appear, high-ranking U.S. law enforcement officials say. "Reports we're getting indicate that despite the bombing and the military action, heroin continues to flow out of Afghanistan," Drug Enforcement Administrator Asa Hutchinson said last week. "There has been no diminishment of that, even though there has been a price fluctuation." While some heroin comes from the zone controlled by the Northern Alliance forces, the vast majority is produced in areas governed by the Taliban, U.S. officials say. Weeks of bombing and a U.S.-led effort to seize international financial assets of the Taliban and Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida terror network are starting to create cash-flow problems, the officials say. The quickest solution is heroin-generated cash. Ironically, if the Taliban are profiting from higher drug prices now in their moment of financial need, a decision made by the Islamic fundamentalist regime a year ago on either religious grounds or as a shrewd business calculation likely caused the price increase, experts say. In July 2000, the Taliban's leader, Mullah Mohammed Omar, issued a decree banning the production of opium and heroin. Prices of the drugs soared almost immediately and have remained high. Anti-drug officials say recent intelligence has indicated that opium growers who answer to the Taliban have been emptying warehouses and pushing large shipments toward Pakistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan. Most of the heroin moves across Afghanistan's long border with Pakistan into places like this frontier city where Taliban support runs high, officials say. Some shipments are smuggled through Quetta's airport and bus station to the rest of Pakistan. At the port at Karachi, the narcotics are shipped out to cities all over the world, officials said. The goal is to create cash for the war effort with the United States, some officials say. "DEA possesses credible source information indicating ties between the drug trade and the Taliban," Hutchinson said. "The Taliban derive a significant amount of income from the opiate trade." Some experts believe that the Taliban regime has a dual motive for pushing the drug trade now that it is at war with a U.S.-led coalition. For the Taliban and al-Qaida, narcotics are the best possible weapon, said Rachel Ehrenfeld of the Center for the Study of Corruption. "They generate funds while corrupting the moral fiber of the enemy," he said. In congressional testimony earlier this year, CIA Director George Tenet agreed. "Some Islamic extremists view drug trafficking as a weapon against the West and a source of revenue to fund their operations," he said. Taliban supporters dispute the connection with the drug trade. Here in Pakistan's Baluchistan province, where sympathy for the Taliban runs high, people point to a decree issued by the Taliban banning opium production as proof that the regime sought to purge the centuries-old opium trade from the country. A local government official who agreed to be interviewed on the condition that his name not be used said, "The Taliban told the world it would stop the heroin growing there, and that is what happened." Asked about the addict population at the graveyard, he said, "That is two or three thousand out of (Quetta's) 1 million people. It is nothing." Even heroin addicts in Pakistan, including Afghan refugees, say their experience is that the Taliban do not tolerate narcotics now. "There was nothing there; no heroin could be found," said Abdul Salaam, 33, who confessed that he migrated to Pakistan from the Kandahar area earlier this year in search of drugs. "Over there, you could only find poppy petals to chew," he said. But U.S. and U.N. anti-drug intelligence reports said any notion that the Taliban's motto on drug use is "Just say no" is spurious. The U.N. Drug Control Policy office in Vienna, Austria, recently released a paper on Taliban anti-drug efforts in the late 1990s that observed, "There were no verified instances in which narcotics or precursor chemicals were seized or destroyed (by the Taliban). There were no reports that drug traffickers or local drug dealers were arrested or prosecuted. And there (was) no verified destruction of morphine or heroin laboratories." The Taliban have controlled much of the world's heroin supply since taking power in 1996. Afghan farmers grow acres of red poppies that yield the opium gum easily converted to heroin, and they produce about 70 percent of the drug consumed worldwide. While most U.S. heroin starts as poppies in Mexico and South America, a significant portion of Pakistan's supply comes from Afghanistan. In the first four years of Taliban rule, the amount of opium production in the country nearly doubled, reaching an all-time peak of 3,700 metric tons in 2000, according to figures compiled by the U.N. Drug Control Policy office. U.S. officials say the Taliban took a cut of the profits by taxing poppy growers. Bin Laden's al-Qaida fighters got paid for providing security for drug shipments, some Western intelligence agencies believe. Hutchinson was more cautious about bin Laden's involvement but said the Saudi exile at least indirectly had benefited from narcotics trafficking. "Although DEA has no direct evidence to confirm that bin Laden is involved in the drug trade, the relationship between the Taliban and bin Laden is believed to have flourished in large part due to the Taliban's reliance on the drug trade for organizational revenue," he said. When Omar ordered opium production halted, the decree had a startling effect. Opium production fell from an all-time peak to almost zero within months. But Western experts were cynical about that decree from the start, seeing it as more of a marketing ploy than a result of religious conviction. "At the time the Taliban instituted its ban, our information was that the value of existing heroin in Afghanistan was at an all-time low," Bradley Hittle of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy said in a recent interview. After the ban went into effect, the price of heroin shot up almost immediately worldwide, and the effect is still being felt by addicts from Quetta's graveyard to Houston. U.S. officials say the Taliban knew that enormous supplies of narcotics remained in warehouses in Afghanistan and that the flow of opium and heroin out of Afghanistan did not slow much, if any. But prices soared, adding to the wealth of the Taliban. The DEA has long recognized Pakistan's key position as a transit point for Afghan heroin and has tried to help create an anti-drug force here. Pakistani officials involved in fighting drugs declined to be interviewed for the record last week, saying permission to talk must be cleared in the capital of Islamabad. Requests for an interview with officials there were ignored. Junkies clustered in the Quetta graveyard say the local authorities leave them alone as long as they stay put. Whether the setting designated by the police for the Pakistan version of Needle Park was intended with grim humor, the joke did not seem to register with those in various states of stupor from heroin ingestion. "I'd like to quit, but it is difficult here. There is no place to go for treatment," Abdullah said as he shivered violently, from either the drugs coursing through his blood or a cutting November wind that portended a long winter. Instead, he has become part of the community here that has constructed crude living spaces in the caves, maximizing the time that can be spent inside the earthen walls of the graveyard. If treatment options are few, drug enforcement efforts in Pakistan have received a boost from the United States. Hutchinson said the DEA has helped train an effective anti-drug force in Pakistan. "These are veteran units -- highly sensitive, motivated investigative units," he said. "They are trained at our DEA facility at Quantico (Va.), where they undergo polygraph examination and are tested to be drug-free and as free of corruption as we can determine." That model may soon be applied in countries on Afghanistan's northern border, he said. "We want to continue this and develop similar programs in other Central Asian countries," he said. "The international effort that surrounds Afghanistan is critical to addressing the heroin addiction problem in the long term." Chronicle reporters John C. Henry and Patty Reinert contributed to this report from Washington. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart