Pubdate: Tue, 22 Mar 2005 Source: Financial Times (UK) Copyright: The Financial Times Limited 2005 Contact: http://www.ft.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/154 Author: Jimmy Burns and Saleha Way Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) AFGHAN MINISTER SEEKS AID IN WAR ON HEROIN The international community must continue to fund alternative development programmes in Afghanistan if the war on heroin and terrorism there is to succeed, Lieutenant General Mohammad Daud Daud, the country's deputy interior minister, said yesterday. "This is not just a national problem, it is an international one ... Our message is clear. We can see the poverty of our farmers and the responsibility there is to provide them with additional crops and finance," Lt Gen Daud, who has special responsibility for combating drugs, said during a visit to the UK. According to Lt Gen Daud, preliminary surveys suggest there will be a reduction of between 30 and 90 per cent in the amount of land being used to grow poppies in the coming months. He suggested that the internationally backed eradication programme was beginning to show positive results after Afghanistan's opium crop reached 4,200 tonnes in 2004, the largest annual figure since the end of Taliban rule. But with this year's harvest still ongoing and the absence of more definitive data on eradication awaiting more reliable United Nations estimates later this year, UK officials yesterday pointed more cautiously to figures of 40 tonnes being seized over the last month, and 75 tonnes over the last year. "We believe there is a window of opportunity for turning the tide and there are some encouraging signs but we need to wait for more reliable statistics," a Foreign Office spokesman said. Earlier, in an interview with the FT, Lt Gen Daud painted an upbeat picture of his government's new offensive on Afghanistan's rampant opium trade. He said police and the Afghan special counter-narcotics force, trained by UK special forces, were closing down heroin producing laboratories as well as intercepting the trade in opium poppies. However, he described the situation as "difficult", warning that farmers would easily switch back to cultivating opium if tough law enforcement was not accompanied by sufficient financial incentives and the country's economic regeneration. With a British general election likely to take place in May, the UK government has been anxious to retain a prominent role in Afghanistan's battle against narcotics. The opposition Conservative party in the UK has pointed to Afghanistan as the source of more than 90 per cent of the heroin sold on British streets as evidence that the government's war on drugs is failing. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth