Pubdate: Thu, 7 Oct 2004 Source: Kansas City Star (MO) Copyright: 2004 The Kansas City Star Contact: http://www.kcstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/221 Author: Malcolm Garcia, Knight Ridder Newspapers Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/poppy+farmers DRUG DEALERS EYED IN ATTACK ON KARZAI RUNNING MATE KABUL, Afghanistan -- Drug dealers may have been behind an assassination attempt on the vice presidential running mate of Afghan President Hamid Karzai, the government said Thursday. Wednesday's attack on Ahmed Zia Massood in Badakhshan province, a fertile poppy-growing region in the north, killed one person and injured five others, including the former provincial governor. It came just days before Saturday's landmark election, when Afghans will choose a president for the first time. Sardar Roshan, Karzai's campaign manager, suggested drug smugglers might be worried that the election could give the government a mandate to crack down on the burgeoning drug trade. "Badakhshan is one of the biggest producers of poppy cultivation with a lot of warlords around," Roshan said. "The drug dealers and warlords support one another. When a strong man comes along, they will resist." The attack indicates the challenges the new president will have in confronting powerful warlords who use profits from poppies, from which opium and heroin are made, to fund their armies and amass power. Karzai, who assumed power with U.S. backing in December 2001, has vowed to eradicate poppies. But he lacks the military or political muscle to move against the drug trade. Although he has had difficulty extending his influence beyond the country's capital of Kabul, Karzai is expected to win the election. He's competing against 15 other candidates. Two minor candidates dropped out Wednesday and threw their support to him. Whoever wins, the warlords will still have the upper hand. About 60,000 to 100,000 armed men are members of private militias, according to CARE International, an aid organization. As of last month, about 16,000 militia soldiers have been demobilized. At the same time, about 13,000 soldiers have been recruited in the Afghan National Army. The goal is to recruit 70,000 by 2005. Poppies are being grown in 28 of 32 Afghan provinces, and this year's crop is expected to yield 75 percent of the world's heroin. The United Nations has concluded that the combined income of poppy farmers and smugglers last year was about $2 billion, half of Afghanistan's economy. "It's another indication on how the opium trade destabilizes local politics," said John Sifton, the Afghanistan researcher for Human Rights Watch's Asia division. "If Massood had been killed, it would have been hugely destabilizing. It would have knocked out Karzai's vice presidential candidate. Who would take his place on the ticket at this late date?" Sifton said a test of whether the election will help eliminate the warlords' power will come when the new president selects a Cabinet. "If it's stocked with warlords as it is now, a lot of Afghans will see this as a meaningless political exercise because it will be more of the same. Warlords will dominate the process." A strained atmosphere settled over Kabul on Thursday following reports of the attack. Countless shops were closed, and cars and trucks moved easily on the normally congested roads. More than 100,000 security personnel, including 18,000 American-led troops and 9,000 NATO peacekeepers, have been patrolling the country to provide security for voters. U.S. and Afghan officials have warned of increasing attacks by Taliban militants in the days before the election and on Saturday. An estimated 10.5 million people have registered to vote. However, a surprisingly sharp rise in registrations over the summer has led to speculation about multiple registrations that could throw the legitimacy of the election into question. "I don't think the situation is right for voting," said candidate Ghulam Faruq, a political activist and physician. "We need peace and security. We need roads and infrastructure. The warlords still have too much control. We don't have a fully functioning national army. Without peace, how can we do it correctly?" - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin