Pubdate: Wed, 07 Feb 2001 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2001 The New York Times Company Contact: 229 West 43rd Street, New York, NY 10036 Fax: (212) 556-3622 Website: http://www.nytimes.com/ Forum: http://forums.nytimes.com/comment/ Author: Barbara Crossette TALIBAN SEEM TO BE MAKING GOOD ON OPIUM BAN, U.N. SAYS Initial results from a survey of opium-growing areas of Afghanistan in recent days indicate that the Taliban may have succeeded in sharply reducing the annual poppy crop, astonished United Nations narcotics-control officials say. Last year, Afghanistan was the world's largest producer of opium, which is derived from poppies and is the material from which heroin is made. Poppies are now in bloom in the Afghan fields, allowing aerial and ground surveys to be done across large areas to test the ban on opium production by the Taliban, the hard-line Islamic movement that rules most of the country. The ban was announced last year to skeptical response from narcotics experts. On Monday, the United Nations Office for Drug Control and Crime Prevention's regional office for Afghanistan and Pakistan said that surveys in the northern provinces of Nangarhar, Laghman and Kunar, which together contain more than 25 percent of the total land that had been devoted to the poppy crop, found no significant signs of cultivation this year. Similar reports are beginning to come in from Helmand, which had 52 percent of the land devoted to the crop last year. The survey ends on Feb. 10 and a final report will be issued sometime later. Bernard Frahi, a French expert on narcotics and organized crime who led the survey teams in Afghanistan from Feb. 1-4, said in a report that his mission visited farmland known to include about 2,000 major pockets of opium production. The inspection was done by all-terrain vehicles and on foot. "Although it is hard to believe," Mr. Frahi, the regional director, wrote to his headquarters in Vienna, where the United Nations drug program is based, "No poppy field has been identified in the area." Mr. Frahi said he was accompanied on his inspection tour by drug officers from Canada and Norway and one Pakistani agricultural expert attached to the narcotics affairs section of the American Embassy in Islamabad. The narcotics experts found that Afghan farmers were trying to grow wheat, onions, garlic and other crops. Afghans told the inspection team, however, that they were very fearful about their livelihoods. Alternate crops require a steady supply of seeds, fertilizer and water -- all of which are in short supply, and Afghanistan under the Taliban gets almost no foreign aid. Moreover, in the last year Afghanistan has suffered the worst drought in half a century. The World Bank warned today that the country was headed for a major famine. Up to a million people are in danger of starving, aid agencies say. The United Nations issued an urgent appeal today to governments for clothing, blankets and tents for the 100,000 Afghans who have fled to the western city of Herat to escape the drought and fighting between the Taliban and an opposition force that is clinging to about 5 percent of the country. About 500 people have frozen to death around Herat in recent weeks, United Nations officials say. The United States, which under the Clinton administration led a campaign in the United Nations to impose sanctions on the Taliban for their refusal to hand over Osama bin Laden, the Saudi financier of Islamic militancy, said today that it would fly relief goods to the battered country. Tents, blankets and some water supplies are expected to be flown by the United States Agency for International Development to Pakistan, where more than 150,000 new refugees need help, as well as to Afghanistan, American diplomats said in Islamabad. The plane is scheduled to reach Herat by Friday. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth