Pubdate: Sat, 27 Apr 2002 Source: Chicago Sun-Times (IL) Copyright: 2002 The Sun-Times Co. Contact: http://www.suntimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/81 Author: Kathy Gannon OPIUM CRACKDOWN RILES AFGHAN FARMERS GHANI KHIEL, Afghanistan--Soldiers stormed in by the hundreds, smashed the bolted wooden doors of ramshackle shops and seized more than six tons of opium at Afghanistan's biggest drug market. The raid this week was the largest show of the interim government's resolve to wipe out the lucrative opium trade that resumed with the fall of the Taliban. But it went badly wrong. The soldiers appeared more like a thieving party, ripping the watches off the wrists of store owners, pulling money from their pockets and taking everything in the shops--as well as the opium, shopkeepers said. ''They weren't interested in destroying our opium. They took our opium to sell,'' said Javed Khan, a store owner. ''They were just thieves.'' ''They ordered us to sit down and then just took everything,'' said Mohammed Nabi. Now residents of Ghani Khiel, 36 miles east of the provincial capital of Jalalabad, are fighting mad--and heavily armed. ''We're ready to shed blood over this,'' Khan said. On Friday, a rocket launcher was pointed toward the village entrance. Residents warned they were ready to do battle with the government if a settlement is not brokered by their elders, who were meeting to find a way out of the impasse. Negotiations won't be easy. Fifty residents are in jail and the entire village is up in arms. The elders sat in a stark white cement building in Ghani Khiel. Outside, their bodyguards brandished rocket launchers and Kalashnikov assault rifles, and railed against Haji Abdul Qadir, the interim regime's governor of the eastern province of Nangarhar. When the opium market flourished, shopkeepers in Ghani Khiel had a routine. They sat in their dusty courtyards on rope beds, sipping tea and waiting for customers. On Friday, they gathered as usual, but their shops were shuttered. They accused Qadir of sending soldiers into Ghani Kiel because most residents are loyal to a rival warlord, Haji Zaman Khan. At the entrance to Ghani Khiel, a graffiti-scarred board put up by the deposed Taliban still sits slightly lopsided. It reads: ''Drug abuse is the greatest evil of our society. Let us save our lives, save our children's lives.'' But inside Ghani Khiel's opium market, store owners say they aren't ready to change. ''When they give us roads, schools, hospitals and something that brings us as much money, we will stop selling it,'' said Gul Ahmed Shah, a store owner whose long gray beard was shaggy and unkempt. Other shopkeepers agreed, speaking at once, interrupting each other, each in turn complaining about the woeful state of their economy. Interim Prime Minister Hamid Karzai--like the Taliban--banned poppies, but so far most farmers have ignored the order. Karzai's government has offered money to farmers to destroy their crops. But Khan, the shopkeeper, said the interim government has to first deal with a credibility problem. No one believed the opium the soldiers took would be destroyed. ''You tell them, 'If it is the opium they wanted to destroy, then tell them to bring it right here and burn it in front of us,''' Khan said. ''Then we will talk about the next step.'' AP - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens