Pubdate: Sat, 10 Apr 2004 Source: Frontier Post, The (Pakistan) Copyright: 2004 The Frontier Publications (Pvt) Contact: http://frontierpost.com.pk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/575 FARMERS BLAME POPPY GROWTH ON LACK OF WATER, GLUT OF WHEAT DARE NOOR (Agencies): Facing government-imposed eradication of their precious crops, Afghan poppy growers blame drought and international food aid - Canada's included - for their decision to feed the world narcotics trade. Interim President Hamid Karzai says he will dispatch Afghan forces this weekend to take down thousands of hectares of poppies worth billions of dollars on opium and heroin markets the world over. But farmers in Ningarhar Province in eastern Afghanistan say they doubt security forces will make anything more than a symbolic effort at preventing the rise of what Karzai fears will become an Afghan narco-state. And they vow to continue growing the flower until aid agencies and Afghanistan's weak central government start providing viable alternatives. Mohammad Yusaf, a 48-year-old father of nine, served 28 years in the government. Now he is jobless with no salary. "We know it is a harmful thing that we do and that it is against human life," says Yusaf. "But we are also human beings and we also need to have a good life. We have no alternatives." "The people of Afghanistan will continue growing poppies until all the weapons are collected, until we have jobs and until we are protected by a constitutional law that has practical meaning." Afghanistan provides three-quarters of the world's heroin - 97 per cent of Europe's alone. The country's dry climate is uniquely suited to the red and white flowers that bloom on roadsides and in hidden valleys alike throughout the region. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh