Pubdate: Sun, 25 Aug 2002 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2002 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/82 Author: Pamela Constable, The Washington Post Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) http://www.mapinc.org/area/Afghanistan POPPY GROWERS SEE PROMISES WILT CHAPARHAR, Afghanistan - Three months ago, a truckload of government workers arrived at Malik Ziauddin's village, accompanied by armed guards. Wielding sticks and sickles, they beat and chopped at his prized crop until only useless green pulp was left. Ziauddin, 65, a sunburned farmer, watched with mingled regret and anticipation. Like thousands of other farmers who grow opium poppies in Afghanistan, he had been promised $350 in cash for each 15th of an acre that was destroyed--far less than drug smugglers normally paid, but still a tempting deal. By last week, however, none of the money had reached the poppy farmers in Ziauddin's village, parched by four years of drought that thirstier crops such as wheat cannot withstand. The villagers vowed angrily that if they are not paid soon, they will start growing poppies again. "We know poppy causes problems for people in other parts of the world, and we would not grow it if we had water," Ziauddin said. "Every time we go to the city for our money, they tell us to come back later. . . . This is our livelihood. Soon we will have no choice but to plant." The frustration expressed by Ziauddin and his neighbors is the unintended fallout from an internationally backed effort to eradicate poppy cultivation in Afghanistan, which produces about 75 percent of the opium used for making heroin worldwide. Repeatedly undermined by a variety of problems, including subterfuge and sabotage by growers, logistical delays, political rivalries and violence, the ambitious three-month effort ended recently with only 25 percent of the crop destroyed and the rest making its way through the illegal pipeline to addicts in the West. A Lucrative Crop Poppies have been harvested in small amounts for generations in Afghanistan, but as world demand for heroin soared in the 1960s and '70s, more and more Afghan farmers switched to poppies, which yield 20 times the price of wheat. Poppy cultivation peaked in 1999, with 225,000 acres sown and 5,050 tons of opium produced, while most of Afghanistan was ruled by the Islamic Taliban movement. But the Taliban suddenly banned the crop and succeeded in virtually wiping it out, with only 19,000 acres grown last year, according to the UN Drug Control Program. After the Taliban collapsed in November under a U.S.-led military assault, many farmers returned to growing poppies. By February, a UN land survey predicted that 1,900 to 2,700 tons of opium would be produced in Afghanistan this year. "People weren't sure whether the Taliban were going to fall or not last year, so some planted poppy and some didn't, but already the level is back up to about half what it was," said Mohammed Alim, the UN program's regional director in Jalalabad. The government of President Hamid Karzai, which was installed by the United Nations in December with Western backing, came under strong foreign pressure to halt the poppy revival. In February, Karzai banned production. As a short-term incentive, the British government offered to subsidize farmers who agreed to destroy their plants. Most of the heroin consumed in Britain originates in Afghanistan. Other donors promised longer-term projects to dig wells and irrigation canals so farmers could switch back to edible crops. Key Official Slain Eradication began in April, and one of its major targets was here in Nangahar province, a rich agricultural region in eastern Afghanistan that is a major poppy producer. Haji Abdul Qadir, then the provincial governor, visited numerous villages urging farmers to comply, but last month he was assassinated in Kabul, where he had just been named a vice president. "He asked us not to grow poppy, and we told him we had no water to grow anything else. He promised to bring us water, and because we respected him as an elder, we obeyed," said Sahar Gul, 80, a farmer in Qadir's native Sukh Rod district. "Two or three days later, he was killed. Now we don't know whether we will get water or not." According to a British official who worked with the program, government videotapes of workers chopping down poppy plants showed farmers in the background, frantically slitting poppy bulbs to obtain as much opium sap as possible before the plants were crushed. "They wanted to have their cake and eat it too," said the official. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake