Pubdate: Sat, 21 Jan 2006 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2006, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Daniel Werb Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) CANADA'S ATTACK ON AFGHAN SMACK Before Being Killed By A Suicide Bomber, Daniel Werb Reports, Glyn Berry Was Part Of A Scheme To Help A Minor Nation Kick A Major Habit Early in the 11th century, the master Afghan doctor Avicenna, one of the fathers of modern medicine, praised opium as the most potent of all pain relievers. Yet, a thousand years later, the same drug, coupled with resurgent terrorism, has his homeland in agony. Opium and insurgency both played a role in the suicide bombing of a Canadian patrol on the outskirts of Kandahar this week that left diplomat Glyn Berry dead and three soldiers travelling with him severely injured. Mr. Berry was director of the Canadian reconstruction team operating in the region, and perfectly aware that Kandahar is a traditional opium hotbed as well as a former Taliban stronghold. But he was determined that, as part of rebuilding the area, the team would undermine the drug traffickers as well as the insurgents, who are often believed to be one and the same. In a telephone interview conducted not long before his death, he called Canadian soldiers "gate-openers" who "allow us to reach communities that haven't had any contact with the central government since the days of the Taliban." Opening the gate, he added, had shown him that, when it comes to opium, "the Afghan farmer isn't in it for profit -- they're in it for survival. If you don't produce enough, you end up in debt to someone with less-than-noble objectives. Certainly, the farmers I've met have an acute unwillingness to be a part of the business." His hopes were especially high because of a "beautiful, defining moment" -- the recent gathering of residents of the region, Afghan officials and Canadian military and diplomatic personnel for a shura, or traditional political council, to discuss reconstruction priorities. "All these communities that hadn't participated politically," he explained, "were suddenly involved and working together with us," raising the possibility that the Canadian mission really could weaken farmers' willingness to toil for the drug lords. Mr. Berry's killing, of course, puts this sense of unity in grave jeopardy and serves as a stark reminder of the forces that threaten the stability of the entire region. The stakes are high -- the planting of this year's opium crop drew to a close last month, and now, only weeks after last year's final harvest, drugs are flooding the trade routes from Afghanistan to Iran, Russia, Europe, China and beyond. In the first two weeks of this year, more than three tonnes of opium, heroin and morphine were seized, sometimes bloodily, by border guards in one Iranian border province alone. Such hauls suggest a huge jump in heroin production that could very well drag Afghanistan back into a state of perpetual violence. But Mr. Berry was far from the only one fighting to keep that from happening. At the University of Calgary, Peter Facchini mulls over his latest puzzle. He leads one of only two labs in the world that study opium poppies, and has been asked to find a way for the Afghan government to distinguish legal opium crops, used to produce medicine such as morphine, from those used for heroin. One method, he admits, sounds a little like science fiction: "Inserting a genetic marker directly into the chromosomes of opium poppies." Adding foreign DNA, in this case from a jellyfish, would do nothing more than make the plant glow an unearthly, luminescent green when exposed to ultraviolet light. Alternately, Dr. Facchini envisions a system like the one devised by Monsanto Co. with its Terminator strains. Sterile poppy seeds would be allocated to farmers, allowing them to produce only one year's crop and forcing them to rely on the government when it comes time to plant again next year. There is hesitation in Dr. Facchini's voice as he discusses his findings. For the past decade and a half, he has researched just about all there is to know about the opium poppy, but with this latest Afghan challenge, he is unsure which approach to take. "The science," he says cautiously, "is much less of a problem than the political or social aspects of the situation." Emmanuel Reinert would agree. He is the director of the Senlis Council, a Paris-based drug-policy think-tank that also has some ideas on what to do about the Afghan situation. The ideas are so controversial that the charming Mr. Reinert spends much of his time deflecting criticism from the United Nations, other members of the international community and the government of President Hamid Karzai. The council has a plan that would see the institution of an opium licensing system in Afghanistan, and a conversion of opium used to produce heroin into a legal cash crop: medical-grade morphine. The money generated would help to stabilize Afghanistan's weak central government, but, perhaps not surprisingly, the scheme has ruffled many feathers. Ever since the release of its study's initial findings (which included Dr. Facchini's research) at a Kabul conference in September, the council has been working overtime to win converts. "We received the initial response from the Ministry of Counter-Narcotics in Afghanistan, in which they were critical of the project, but offered no specific arguments against it. All they said was that it was too soon to think about licit opium and that the plan would be 'disruptive,' " Mr. Reinert says. "What does that say? Well, clearly the opium problem is not just a drug problem. It's too big, it's multidimensional." He argues that the sheer size of the drug trade -- Afghanistan produces 87 per cent of the world's heroin -- makes it foolish to have just one agency, be it the Afghan Counter-Narcotics Ministry or the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), deal with it. "In a country where illegal drug cultivation represents about 60 per cent of the economy, it's not a counter-narcotic problem. It's an economic problem. Simply eradicating crops won't solve anything." Mr. Reinert is particularly incensed by the UN agency's reaction to the opium licensing study. Days after the study began last March, Doris Buddenberg, the UNODC's country director for Afghanistan, sent a scathing memo to Kabul's diplomatic community insisting that the "arguments put forward by the Senlis Council with regard to legalizing poppy cultivation . . . cannot be justified." The study, she added, also "could stir confusion and raise false expectations." More recently, the agency has dismissed the project as a "pipe dream." Supremely unimpressed, Mr. Reinert says that "the UNODC doesn't have the right expertise to comment on this study, because this is not just a counter-narcotics issue -- it's much more than that. It's ridiculous to think that law enforcement can tackle the problem. That's just a dangerous way of looking at it." There are hints that some big players in Afghanistan are beginning to recognize the dangers. The latest U.S. budget update shows Washington plans serious cuts to its reconstruction work and military presence, hoping that by this summer, the bulk of its responsibilities will fall to North Atlantic Treaty Organization forces and the Afghans. That's good news for Mr. Reinert: Without the Americans to guide drug-eradication efforts in the country, Afghan authorities may be more at liberty to consider the plan to produce morphine. In happier times, Kandahar was known as the breadbasket of Central Asia, but the food crops have given way to vast fields of opium poppies and land mines, the result of two decades of war that destroyed the region's irrigation network and exacerbated the effects of a decade-long drought. The Canadian contingent, based in an abandoned fruit cannery in Kandahar City, is a mix of personnel from the armed forces, Foreign Affairs and the Canadian International Development Agency. They work together under the rubric of a Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT), a model of development devised by the UN. Just a few kilometres from PRT headquarters, the palace built by Osama bin Laden for Mullah Omar, the mysterious head of the Taliban, still stands. Recent years have been punctuated by Taliban offensives in the region, and military observers predict that 2006 will be no different. The Canadian Forces are taking no chances, with members of the elite Joint Task Force 2 being brought in ahead of another anticipated offensive. (No one knows exactly when, but it's expected by March.) "It's a high-threat environment, that's for certain," says Colonel Steve Bowes, the team's military commander. "We've been hit directly by a suicide bomber. Does that make us different from the other coalition forces? No. We're targeted because we're here to help the Afghan government." The PRT's three directors were Col. Bowes, Michael Callan of CIDA and, of course, Mr. Berry, who was passionate about the perils of eradicating opium production. "When the Taliban imposed a ban on poppy cultivation, Afghanistan was producing 4,000 tonnes of opium," he said in the interview. "Within a year, that had dropped to three tonnes. But that ban didn't make any long-term difference." Instead, opium soon soared to new heights. Many observers believe that, although the Taliban outlawed cultivation for one year, it was just to draw greater profits from their tax on opium trafficking, which wasn't covered by the ban. Nowadays, although the links between Taliban insurgents and drug traffickers in Afghanistan aren't perfectly clear, there is no doubt the two groups have formed a dangerous symbiosis. Each benefits from the other's undermining of the rule of law and power of the central government. As well, Taliban gunmen have provided informal security for drug traffickers in the south of the country in return for profits from the opium trade. Mr. Berry tried to undermine this dual threat. He made building relationships with the community a priority, but was quick to point out how the lack of infrastructure fuels the trade. "You can't eradicate without preparing the ground well. I have talked to farmers directly in the district. In a sense, the lack of water has been an ally of the traffickers. Nothing grows better than poppy. It's amazing. It's an incredibly aggressive crop." He contended that the only way to overcome the problem is to apply an even-handed, inclusive and long-term reconstruction. That way, farmers won't be tempted to rebel and help the Taliban insurgency. "The opium industry is like a lot of problems in Afghanistan -- it goes back 25 years," he said. "But over time, I think we can make an impact." To that end, CIDA workers have been quietly working all across the province in the hopes of restoring communities' faith in a post-Taliban Afghan government by offering incentives such as training for alternative livelihoods, micro-credit loans and the rebuilding of irrigation networks. "Often, the only system whereby people can access credit is through opium traffickers, who can only be paid back if the farmers grow opium," Mr. Callan explains. The PRT has set out to disrupt that system by providing loans itself - -- and the approach seems to be working. In a recent survey, each Afghan province recorded an increased level of poppy planting, except Kandahar, where it decreased. Mr. Reinert of the Senlis Council applauds Canada's efforts, but he cautions that Canadian forces are in greater jeopardy than the public has been led to believe. The initial peacefulness of the PRT's mission was, he claims, due to the Afghan government's decision to postpone forcible eradication. Now Mr. Berry's death could be just the tip of the iceberg. Last June, the first eradication campaign came to a bloody end on its very first day when farmers in Kandahar took up arms and, backed by insurgents, attacked and killed government officers. No significant opium eradication has taken place since, but no one doubts that it is on the way. Providing farmers with a livelihood isn't the opium trade's only Afghan legacy: The UN estimates there are more than a million drug addicts in the country, many of them in Kabul. As director of the Zindagi-e-Naowin (New Life) drug-treatment centres in the capital and nearby Faizabad, Shairshah Bayan has devoted his career to helping addicts. The treatment at his centres is what Dr. Bayan terms "community-based." That is, 40 to 50 addicts at a time are given medication, but they also take part in programs designed to help them find work and rejoin the community. However, one side effect of the drive to destroy the Afghan drug trade has been to cut off the addicts' access to pain relievers. Dr. Bayan says his clinics face a chronic shortage of medicine: "Drug-control efforts predominantly focus on the reduction of supply, often ignoring the important aspect of local drug demand as an obstacle to development." Morphine and other painkillers, he says, simply cost too much to prescribe. Afghanistan's opium crops could provide the country with a stable supply of raw materials, of course, but the Karzai government has, perhaps as a result of international pressure, neglected to tap this resource. To address the need for cheap medicine, Mr. Reinert of the Senlis Council has proposed a form of "fair-trade" morphine that would ensure cash-strapped countries of low-cost Afghan drugs. "Eighty per cent of the world population has access to only 6 per cent of the morphine produced," he says. "The seven richest countries are consuming 77 per cent of current morphine. We have to look into that." As well as addressing the global shortage of opium-based drugs, he says, setting up preferential trade agreements between Afghanistan and other developing countries would stimulate economic development. Back in Calgary, Dr. Facchini isn't overly enthusiastic about the notion of cut-rate Afghan morphine, if only because of the hostility the concept has drawn from his contacts in the pharmaceutical industry. (One company he works with raised the subject after seeing the University of Calgary logo on the Senlis Council website.) "I have a sense -- though I'm not an authority -- that the poppy industry is not a thriving industry, and that these companies are just holding their own," he explains. "They certainly don't need someone to come along and start dumping cheap opium on the market." His unease -- shared by a great majority of those opposed to the opium licensing plan -- has been addressed by another Canadian researcher working on the Senlis Council's study, Benedikt Fischer of Toronto's Centre for Addiction and Mental Health. A member of the team behind the prescription-heroin trial now being conducted in Vancouver and Toronto, Dr. Fischer was handed the task by the Senlis Council of assessing the current global need for morphine. What he uncovered was an industry that acts much like a cartel to keep prices artificially high. Although concerned about creating an adequately secure system to safeguard legal opium from Afghanistan's drug traffickers and insurgents, Dr. Fischer believes that access to medicine should trump other concerns. "The need really outsizes the supply when it comes to morphine, but due to the strict regulations imposed by the UN, this is a tightly controlled market and industry," he says. "The natural demand and supply processes can't really meet each other." Loosening the morphine market regulations and introducing a new supplier will, Dr. Fischer hopes, make pain treatment affordable around the world. The call for opium-based medicines, he says, will only intensify in the coming years as developing countries expand their treatment of pain for diseases such as HIV/AIDS. For Mr. Reinert, the battle is just beginning -- what was initially conceived as a short study has now been extended indefinitely, and the Senlis Council is tendering contracts for researchers to explore every facet of opium licensing in Afghanistan. More research, however, is unlikely to uncover a solution to the central challenges facing the council: effective security and a willingness to embrace alternative solutions seem likely to decide the fate of their opium licensing plan. The situation on the ground, however, is shifting rapidly. With the United States effectively bowing out of Afghanistan, the onus is on other countries to come up with a solution before the drug trade, coupled with the insurgency, causes Mr. Karzai's government to buckle. But the Canadian mission, while shaken by Mr. Berry's death, seems committed for the long term. Both Prime Minister Paul Martin and Conservative Leader Stephen Harper have indicated that they intend to continue the project in the face of increased violence, with Mr. Martin calling it "essential for establishing peace and security" in the region. And a stabilizing force is necessary: Along with an unstable Iraq and hostile Iran, an Afghan "narco-state" would further destabilize Central Asia and worsen the region's already critical levels of HIV/AIDS and heroin addiction. Opium's addictive qualities are widely documented. Even Avicenna discovered just how deadly it can be -- the good doctor himself died of an accidental overdose. Its powers as an agent of change may be much less apparent, but one thing is clear: The poppy will determine the future of Afghanistan, for better or for worse. Writer and researcher Daniel Werb is working with the University of Toronto's HIV-AIDS Africa Initiative. Putting the poppy to good use The Senlis Council has made a lot of waves in a relatively short period of time. The drug think-tank was established in 2002, with offices in Paris, London and Kabul and a staff of about 30 policy analysts, researchers and logistics experts. Small but ornate, the Paris facility serves as the Senlis HQ, replete with gilded ceiling fixtures, wide, gold-framed wall mirrors, and an impeccably dressed staff able to converse in French, English, German, Spanish and Dari, the Afghan language. Supported by the Network of European Foundations, made up of 12 large foundations, the agency focuses its efforts on two major policy areas: lobbying governments and the United Nations to adopt health-based drug policies, and the realization of an opium licensing system in Afghanistan. Despite the council's relatively low profile, the Afghan project has placed it in the limelight and made it the object of conjecture among policy wonks the world over. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom