Pubdate: Sun, 02 Dec 2001 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2001 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/82 Author: Rone Tempest Note: Rone Tempest is a staff reporter for the Los Angeles Times, a Tribune newspaper. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) OPIUM GROWERS REJOICE AT TALIBAN LOSS Poor Farmers Till Land To Plant Crop That Brings Cash KARIZ, Afghanistan -- No one could be more delighted about the departure of the Taliban regime than the opium poppy growers in eastern Afghanistan. In July 2000, the Taliban's leader, Mullah Mohammed Omar, issued an edict banning poppy cultivation across Afghanistan, then the world's largest producer of the flower pod used to make heroin. For years, the Taliban had used taxes on drugs to finance its military. That all changed, however, with Omar's eight-line message. According to a recent report by the UN Drug Control Program, the decree brought raw opium production in Afghanistan to a virtual halt, dropping from 3,276 tons to only 185 tons in just one year. Now that the Taliban has retreated to the mountains, there is an eagerness among farmers in the irrigated lowlands south of Jalalabad, the capital of Nangarhar province. Last week, farmer Ahmed Shah and his neighbors were busy fertilizing and tilling their small plots of land, preparing to plant poppy seeds that will be harvested in April, processed into heroin in neighboring Pakistan and delivered to overseas markets. "I can make 10 times more with poppy than I can with wheat," Shah said as two teenage boys turned the soil nearby. The farmers of eastern Afghanistan are fully aware of the epidemic they feed with their beautiful flowers. They see the hollow-eyed addicts in the bazaars of Peshawar when they travel to Pakistan. "We know we are creating addicts," Shah said. "The only reason we are doing this is because we are poor. If I could find another job, I would stop growing poppies." Samsul Haq, deputy director of the Nangarhar Drug Control and Coordination Office, estimates that before the Taliban edict, 85 percent of the Jalalabad agricultural economy was driven by opium production. "This is a great opportunity for poppy growers," Haq said. "The Taliban is gone. There is confusion about what kind of new order is coming in. The farmers are free to plant poppies." Haq said that unless poppy production is checked by massive foreign aid to provide the farmers an alternative, Afghanistan is almost certain to return to its dubious distinction as the world's top supplier by next summer. The farmers in Kariz, a mud-walled village of 600 families where everyone grows poppies, see opium as the fastest, surest way out of the wrenching poverty brought on by more than two decades of war and turmoil. Haji Saifuddin, a 60-year-old farmer, has been growing poppies for more than 20 years on several plots he owns near Kariz. He alternates poppy planting with cotton, maize and wheat. He said it costs him about $100 for fertilizer and seed for each jerib (about half an acre) of poppies he cultivates. Saifuddin said his return on each jerib is about $5,000, a small fortune in Kariz. But uncertainty about the stability of the new order also has farmers worried. If the current Nangarhar government -- composed of a triumvirate of three former mujahedeen commanders -- fails, that might open the door to rule by a countless collection of local commanders and warlords. "Most of the farmers are happy because they now grow poppies," Haq said, "but they are also fearful that these commanders will steal their income from opium." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager