Pubdate: Mon, 27 Nov 2006 Source: Financial Times (UK) Copyright: The Financial Times Limited 2006 Contact: http://www.ft.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/154 Author: Rachel Morarjee Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) WAR ON DRUGS STRENGTHENS AFGHAN MAFIA Afghanistan's war on drugs has been marred by corruption that has strengthened the grip of an increasingly powerful mafia on the country's narcotics trade, a report by the World Bank and United Nations said. Over the past five years, the British-led counter-narcotics strategy had penalised the country's poorest farmers and strengthened networks of organised crime, consolidating the trade among a tiny elite of traffickers, the damning report said. "Around 25 to 30 key traffickers, the majority of them based in southern Afghanistan, control major transactions and transfers, working closely with sponsors in top government and political positions." Afghanistan's interior ministry, which oversees the police, had been "captured" by powerful traffickers and was used to facilitate the drugs trade. "Those driving the drug industry must be brought to justice and officials who support it sacked," said Antonio Maria Costa, executive director of the UN Office of Drugs and Crime. "Interdiction efforts especially need to target high-level profiteers whose wealth magnifies their potential for corrupting the state," the report said. Strategies aimed at short-term reductions in opium production in the worst affected areas could do more harm than good, fuelling "discontent and strengthening the insurgency in the volatile south of the country". Far from leading to sustained declines in total national cultivation, a successful reduction in one province often led to increases elsewhere, or cultivation in the province itself rebounded the following year, such as in Helmand province after 2003. To achieve long-term success in the battle against drugs eradication, the report found that efforts should be concentrated in the six Afghan provinces where there was relatively little opium cultivation to build up a line of defence against the spread of the trade. "Rural development programmes are needed throughout the country and should not be focused primarily on opium areas, to help prevent cultivation from further spreading," said Alastair McKechnie, World Bank country director for Afghanistan. Efforts to eradicate opium crops had strengthened corruption by giving police an opportunity to collect bribes, which hit hardest the poor farmers and labourers who could not afford to pay off authorities. "Wealthier opium producers pay bribes to avoid having their crops eradicated, greatly reducing the effectiveness of counter-narcotics measures and gravely undermining the credibility of the government and its local representatives," the report said. Afghanistan produced a record opium harvest in 2006, with total cultivation increasing by 59 per cent and production by 49 per cent. The bulk of opium growth this year was concentrated in Helmand and a few other highly insecure and insurgency-ridden provinces in the south. Even in this record year, opium took up less than 4 per cent of the total cultivated area in Afghanistan, with only an estimated 13 per cent of the population involved in poppy cultivation, which the report said was cause for hope. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman