Pubdate: Tue, 13 Feb 2001 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2001 San Jose Mercury News Contact: 750 Ridder Park Drive, San Jose, CA 95190 Fax: (408) 271-3792 Website: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Forum: http://forums.bayarea.com/webx/cgi-bin/WebX Author: Pamela Constable, Washington Post TAJIKISTAN MIRED IN POVERTY, HUNGER Long List Of Woes: Drought, Fighting Across Afghanistan Border, Drug Trade Threaten Nation MOSKOVSKY, Tajikistan -- The plowed earth waits for seeds and fertilizer that never arrive. Soviet-built irrigation aqueducts are crumbled and useless. Abandoned factories rust behind signs in bold red Russian. Able-bodied men spend their days in chilly bazaars, squatting beside used clothing and tools they hope to sell for pennies. This forlorn and wintry country in Central Asia is trapped in time. Its 6 million people are struggling to emerge from the physical and ideological ruins of the Soviet Union, which controlled Tajikistan for six decades, and to heal the wounds of a five-year civil war between ideological and ethnic factions that followed the 1991 Soviet collapse. But the newly independent country is ill-equipped to meet the competitive demands of its fledgling semi-free economy and nascent democracy. Teachers' salaries have fallen to $5 a month, 80 percent of the populace lives in poverty and a severe regional drought has halved the national wheat harvest. 'Only Bread And Tea' "We are eating only bread and tea. Sometimes we find carrots and onions, but it is never enough,'' said Rajabgul Holnazarov, 62, a wrinkled woman in a flowered head scarf waiting in line for a sack of flour from the U.N. World Food Program in the southern town of Qabodian. Holnazarov toiled for 48 years on a Soviet collective farm but hasn't received her pension in more than a year. She bore seven children and was awarded three "Mother Hero'' medals by Soviet authorities for producing such a large family. Now her children are grown and jobless. ``I lost the medals long ago,'' she said. As if the whims of history and nature weren't punishment enough, Tajikistan is also a victim of geography. It shares a 1,000-mile border with Afghanistan, a country in even worse straits that is racked by drought and a civil war between the ruling Taliban Islamic militia and opposition forces based near the border. Afghans Trying To Flee Although the Tajik side is heavily patrolled by Russian border forces under an agreement with the Tajik government, Afghanistan's problems are pressing hard against it. Hundreds of thousands of Afghans have been trying to flee their country, but Tajik authorities won't let them cross the border, saying many are drug smugglers and gunmen, and that ailing Tajikistan cannot withstand a refugee onslaught. Since September, about 12,000 Afghan refugees have been stranded on two snow-covered islands in a marshy riverbed winding between the two countries. Shooting and shelling erupt sporadically from both sides. During the 1992-97 Tajik civil war, Afghanistan welcomed thousands of Tajiks, but now Tajikistan has turned a cold shoulder to its desperate neighbors. Tajikistan also plays host to the Afghan opposition government and its armed forces, led by an ethnic Tajik commander, whose war with the Taliban keeps the refugee crisis boiling. Tajikistan is also trying to fend off the influence of Islamic extremism, which clashes with its tradition of Muslim moderation and with the secular lifestyle that developed under the Soviets. The most worrisome cross-border export is drugs. Afghanistan's poppy crop produces 70 percent of the world's heroin. Although most drugs leave Afghanistan via Pakistan, U.N. officials estimate that one-third of the output passes through Tajikistan, where corruption and poverty provide fertile soil for trafficking. New organized crime groups have proved too powerful for the country's weak civic and political institutions. Money from extortion and drugs reportedly financed a string of chic new restaurants and bars in Dushanbe. Local officials said many desperate Tajiks are easily persuaded to become drug couriers, earning up to $100 -- an enormous sum in Tajikistan -- to carry a kilogram of heroin from the Afghan border to Dushanbe. In October the Tajik government formed a national Drug Control Agency, and officials in border areas are trying to educate residents about the risks of trafficking: addiction, heavy criminal sentences if they are caught, and retribution from Afghan suppliers if they fail to pay for shipments. In one border village, Sairob, BMWs parked next to horse-drawn carts on streets lined with heatless huts suggests that drugs have already dug deeply into the economy. The local clinic has treated several cases of heroin withdrawal, a problem not seen before 1997. For most Tajiks, the struggle is more basic: how to survive honestly on little or no money, and how to adapt to the bewildering shift from a welfare state to an unfamiliar system in which they are expected to sell their own crops and choose their own leaders. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens