Pubdate: Thu, 16 Mar 2006 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456 Author: Peter Gorrie, Feature Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) POPPY CROP COULD HAVE POSITIVE USE Think-Tank Opposes Eradication Policy -- Plants Can Be Used For Other Painkillers -- Bid To Kill Opium Trade Is Futile, Think-Tank Argues Let Afghans Help Ease Shortage Of Painkilling Drugs The attempt to eradicate Afghanistan's opium poppy crop is ineffective and destructive, and should be abandoned, says an international security and development policy think-tank. Afghan farmers should be encouraged to grow the plants for production of morphine, codeine and other opium-derived painkillers in critically short supply around the world, the Paris-based Senlis Council says. While Afghan police, guarded by coalition troops, plow illicit poppies into the ground, millions of people with cancer, HIV/AIDS and surgical or accident wounds endure excruciating pain with no access to drugs that offer relief, the council says. Meanwhile, powerful drug lords -- who convert the crop into the world's main source of heroin -- are squeezing impoverished Afghan farmers and undermining the country's fragile economy and political system, says the council's director general, Emmanuel Reinert. "Instead of believing in the crazy idea of us being able to eradicate it, why not use the resource for legitimate and worthwhile purposes," says University of Toronto's Benedikt Fischer, who did research for Senlis. The eradication policy assumes farmers will switch to other crops. But no alternatives pay enough, so it turns them against the struggling government of Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Canadian and other foreign troops trying to eliminate Taliban insurgents. Farmers get $100 to $150 (U.S.) per kilogram for opium. After paying bribes, and payments for security and supplies to drug lords, they're left with little. They'd be better off in the legal trade, Reinert says. And the government would win support if it protected their crops. Poppies are grown under stringent regulations in Australia, India, Turkey and France for production of painkillers. Supply is controlled almost like a cartel, Fischer says. Multinational giants in Britain, France, United States, Japan and Australia do most of the processing. These countries, along with Italy and Spain, account for nearly 80 per cent of global consumption. The mark-up between farm and hospital shelf is about 5,000 per cent. Unmet demand in the seven main consuming countries is equal to 550 tonnes of opium a year, and, because doctors are using the painkillers more aggressively, the shortfall will soar, Fischer says. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman