Pubdate: Thu, 17 Apr 2003 Source: Financial Times (UK) Copyright: The Financial Times Limited 2003 Contact: http://www.ft.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/154 Author: Jimmy Burns / London Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) WARNING ON RESURGENCE OF AFGHAN DRUG TRADE The head of the United Nation's anti-drug programme, Antonio Maria Costa, yesterday warned that a big international effort was needed to counter a resurgence of the drugs trade in Afghanistan. Mr Costa told the Financial Times that a twin strategy of interdiction and crop-substitution had to be pursued more vigorously, with the support of western countries, if Afghanistan was to be transformed into a stable and economically viable state. According to the UN Office for Drug Control and Crime Prevention, which Mr Costa heads, up to six Afghan provinces are defying a ban on opium poppy cultivation issued by Hamid Karzai, the Afghan president. Afghan heroin is once again flooding the illegal international drugs market. "Afghanistan remains an international problem ... the efforts of the international community have yet to have an impact on provincial governors and warlords who are part of the dynamics of opium cultivation," Mr Costa said. He spoke as international divisions over what anti-drug policies were best surfaced at a UN conference in Vienna. The conference, hosted by the Commission on Narcotics Drugs, the central UN policy-making body, has exposed the difficulties the international community has encountered in reducing illicit drug production, trafficking and abuse worldwide by 2008, a target set at a UN special session five years ago. According to a mid-term report presented by Mr Costa, "encouraging developments are mixed with alarm signals, their relative emphasis depending on the type of drug and on the region under consideration". Production, trafficking, and illicit use of cocaine and heroin have, at best, stabilised at high levels, with the consumption of synthetic drugs and cannabis continuing to rise. Mr Costa said the past five years had also seen a dangerous trend developing from eastern Europe to the north Pacific: the spread of HIV/Aids because of intravenous drug abuse. Both Mr Costa and a majority of ministers - led by the US - attending the conference have resisted calls from pro-liberalisation non-government organisations to redraft UN conventions requiring member states to criminalise a range of drugs. "The NGOs calling for greater liberalisation are definitely a minority. They do not represent many countries round the table," Mr Costa said after NGOs set up a rival conference. However, several European countries, including the UK, Belgium, Switzerland and the Netherlands, have exploited loopholes in the UN conventions to pursue more tolerant policies towards cannabis use, with a greater focus on rehabilitation for hard drug users. The former head of Interpol, Ray Kendall, yesterday urged the UN to examine the lessons being learnt by these European governments and to adopt a more forward-thinking approach to the drugs problem than the current focus on law enforcement. "We have been chasing the problem rather than catching up, still less getting ahead of it," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager