Pubdate: Thu, 31 Oct 2002
Source: Boston Globe (MA)
Page: A1
Copyright: 2002 Globe Newspaper Company
Contact:  http://www.boston.com/globe/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/52
Author: David Filipov

DRUG TRADE FLOURISHES AGAIN IN AFGHANISTAN

Critics Want The US To Target Production

MAM SAHIB, Afghanistan - It's here, somewhere. Tucked among the dusty 
storefronts of this town, a secret laboratory reprocesses opium into heroin 
that is then shipped north to Tajikistan and on to Russia, Europe, and the 
United States.

The location of the laboratory in Imam Sahib is secret because, like the 
estimated 61 other heroin factories in northern Afghanistan that produce 
the deadly narcotic, it operates with the compliance, and possibly the 
protection, of the warlords the US-led bombing campaign helped bring to power.

Authorities in Imam Sahib, in Kunduz Province, flatly assert that the local 
drug business dried up when the Taliban fled. But regional drug control 
officials say the war on terror has not only failed to destroy the illegal 
narcotics trade, it has inadvertently helped restore it to the levels that 
preceded the Taliban's ban on poppy cultivation in 2000, when Afghanistan 
produced 75 percent of the world's opium supply. And privately, people in 
Imam Sahib acknowledge that here, "they do the works of the white powder."

Antinarcotics officials criticize the US-led campaign in Afghanistan for 
targeting terrorism but not the trade that helps to create both the 
instability and the income upon which terror groups thrive. That is a 
contradiction, drug control analysts in the region say, that will continue 
to undermine Afghanistan and the governments of Central Asia.

"Members of the anti-Taliban coalition say that they are fighting against 
terrorist organizations in Afghanistan and that, unfortunately, fighting 
drugs is not a priority," said General Rustam Nazarov, the head of 
Tajikistan's Drug Control Agency. "This is unfortunate, because I know that 
terrorism and the drug trade are two parts of one evil."

Much of Afghanistan's opium and heroin travels to Europe, where the street 
value of a pound of heroin reaches $30,000, via the 682-mile frontier with 
Tajikistan. Nazarov said Afghan heroin laboratories stamp their products 
with trademarks that often boldly display their names and points of origin. 
Major Avaz Yuldashev, Nazarov's aide, produced a 2-pound bag recently at 
the agency's headquarters in the Tajik capital, Dushanbe. The bag bore a 
scorpion-shaped insignia with the words, in Afghan Dari, "Imam Sahib, 
quality guaranteed."

Hamid Karzai, the Afghan president, has vowed to stamp out opium 
production, but the UN has already termed his campaign to ban poppy farming 
"largely a failure." On Friday, the UN's drug control office predicted that 
Afghanistan would produce more than 3,700 tons of opium this year, dwarfing 
last year's 185 tons. The country produced a record 5,070 tons of opium in 
1999, the office said.

The Karzai government offered farmers $500 an acre to destroy poppies when, 
according to UN estimates, that same acre can earn a poppy farmer $6,400 
annually. In some Afghan districts, poppy farmers mined their fields to 
prevent troops from destroying crops.

Karzai's own government includes rumored drug barons. Haji Abdul Qadir, a 
vice president who was gunned down in Kabul in July, was reputed to be 
eastern Afghanistan's main drug lord. Leaders of the Northern Alliance, the 
US-backed coalition that helped defeat the Taliban, now control the defense 
and interior ministries - and, drug analysts say, the illegal narcotics 
trade in the north.

The Taliban's poppy ban never extended to Badakhshan Province, the one part 
of Afghanistan the Northern Alliance controlled throughout the latest civil 
war. According to Tamara Makarenko, a specialist on Central Asia at the 
University of Glamorgan in Wales, opium poppies were cultivated in 6,071 
acres of Badakhshan farmland in 2000. The figure rose to 15,664 in 2001. 
Now, opium cultivation in Badakhshan occupies 32,110 acres. "The trade will 
not disappear, given that people in the current Afghan administration 
continue to profit from it," Makarenko said.

International drug control officials refuse to name names. But privately 
they say that every major warlord and every provincial governor in northern 
Afghanistan is involved. "Look at anyone who is wealthy, and ask yourself, 
what in Afghanistan produces wealth, other than drugs and smuggling," said 
one official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

A US official in Dushanbe acknowledged that it was important to fight the 
drug trade, "because of the sense of lawlessness it creates." However, he 
said, "our immediate concern in the region has been the antiterror effort."

If the people the United States helped put in power are involved in the 
drug trade, this complicates the US-led war on terror. "The drug business 
is not the main source of income for terrorism, but it is a source of 
income," said Antonella Deledda, the regional representative of the UN 
Office for Drug Control and Crime Prevention, who is based in Tashkent, 
Uzbekistan.

Narcotics officials broadly hint that the 10,000 Russian-commanded border 
troops who guard the Tajik-Afghan frontier play a part in the trade. 
"Whatever the Russians confiscate at the border, the drugs are put on 
military planes and flown to Moscow," said one regional official.

Lieutenant Colonel Pyotr Gordiyenko, a spokesman for the Russian troops in 
Dushanbe, denied this allegation, saying his comrades are the ones doing 
the most to prevent the drug trade. Over the past six months, Russian and 
Tajik border guards in Tajikistan have arrested 27 Afghan drug runners and 
killed three others, he said.

Nazarov was asked about allegations linking General Abdul Rashid Dostum, 
the ethnic Uzbek leader who controls much of northern Afghanistan, and Amir 
Latif, the governor of Kunduz province, to the drug trade. He smiled.

He was asked whether Tajik officials were involved and whether Russian 
border guards played a role. He smiled again. "We know their names," he said.
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