Pubdate: Sun, 22 Feb 2004 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Copyright: 2004 The Dallas Morning News Contact: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/117 Author: Reese Erlich, Special Contributor to The Dallas Morning News Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/opium Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/hashish Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/areas/afghanistan OPIUM CONTINUES TO SPROUT FROM NUMBER OF AFGHAN FIELDS Many Say Country's Future Hinges In Large Part On Uprooting Trade KANDAHAR, AFGHANISTAN - Although temperatures sometimes drop below freezing, farmers have already planted this year's opium poppy crop in fields just outside Kandahar. It's no secret to the government of interim President Hamid Karzai or the U.S. troops who patrol the area. Opium poppy is virtually the only winter crop. Akhtar, a major opium growing farmer who asked that his full name not be used, says his and other nearby villages producing drugs rarely encounter any U.S. anti-drug personnel. The farmers are quite open about their business, even offering visitors bowls of salt-roasted marijuana seeds, a byproduct of another major commodity in the village: hashish. Akhtar and other villagers say producing drugs is a matter of capitalist economics. They can earn three times as much growing poppy and marijuana as raising wheat, their traditional crop. "Because these two crops don't require a lot of water," said Akhtar, "we make a better profit when we sell it." U.N. surveys estimate Afghanistan accounted for three quarters of the world's opium last year, and the trade brought in $2.3 billion, more than half of the nation's gross domestic product. New surveys suggest even more will be planted this year. Patrick Fruchet, a Kabul-based U.N. official, said drugs finance local warlords and their private militias, which in turn, keep the country politically destabilized. "How we deal with poppy will make or break Afghanistan in the medium term," Mr. Fruchet said. Threat times three Mr. Karzai made the same point this month when he told an international anti-drug conference that opium production threatened economic recovery, security and even Islam in Afghanistan. "Poppy cultivation destroys all three," he told Afghan leaders, foreign diplomats, military officers and counter-narcotics experts. "We need more help and assistance." Mirwais Yasini, head of Afghanistan's Counter Narcotics Directorate in Kabul, said his government is making some progress in the fight against drugs. The government is educating farmers, cracking down on heroin labs and "eradicating the opium plants," Mr. Yasini said. Additionally, the U.S. Army has begun a new policy of destroying heroin labs and poppy fields when they encounter them during normal operations. Opium poppies have grown in Afghanistan for centuries, but it wasn't until the 1980s that significant amounts were processed into heroin. After the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan in 1979, the mujahadeen guerrillas discovered that heroin smuggling was a lucrative means to finance their anti-Soviet campaign. Weapons for the mujahadeen arrived in Karachi, Pakistan, traveled by truck to the Afghan border and then by mule over the mountain passes. The heroin followed the same trail in reverse. Within a few years after the Soviet withdrawal in 1989, factional fighting among the mujahadeen led to chaos. Heroin quickly became the country's number one export as warlords financed their armies with drug smuggling. By the time the Taliban seized power in 1996, Afghanistan produced roughly 75 percent of the world's heroin. Poppy pressure Under tremendous pressure from the U.S., however, the Taliban reversed course and banned poppy growing in 1999. Within two years, poppy cultivation dropped by more than 90 percent, according to U.N. aerial surveys. It continued only in areas controlled by the Northern Alliance, the U.S.-backed guerrillas that later helped topple the Taliban. Within months after the U.S. invasion in 2001, when Afghanistan had no effective government, farmers planted poppy, and heroin smuggling surged once again. U.N. surveys estimate Afghan opium production rose to 3,968 tons last year. Afghan officials are vowing to destroy huge amounts of crops and arrest big smugglers in coming months. The United Nations and donors are also trying to build a crack Afghan counter-narcotics police. But there are doubts about the ability of the Afghan government to take on powerful warlords who control much of the country and are widely believed to fund their private armies with drug money. Some warlords also hold public office. Mr. Yasini, the drug czar, said the government has tried to crack down on the drug trade but has limited resources. For example, only 430 of the proposed 17,000 Afghan national police will be assigned to anti-drug efforts because the government's priority is fighting the Taliban and maintaining security. Back in the village outside Kandahar, farmers are tending their fields. They understand the social problems caused by drug addiction. "But what option do we have?" asked poppy farmer Akhtar. Reese Erlich is a freelance writer based in San Francisco. The Associated Press contributed to this report. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin