Pubdate: Tue, 13 Jun 2006
Source: Guardian, The (UK)
Copyright: 2006 Guardian Newspapers Limited
Contact:  http://www.guardian.co.uk/guardian/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/175
Author: Declan Walsh, Kabul
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)

UK FEARS RECORD AFGHAN HEROIN OUTPUT

The Afghanistan province being patrolled by British troops will 
produce at least one third of the world's heroin this year, according 
to drug experts who are forecasting a harvest that is both a record 
for the country and embarrassing for the western funded war on narcotics.

British officials are bracing themselves for the result of an annual 
UN poppy survey due later this summer. Early indications show an 
increase on Helmand's 1999 record of 45,000 hectares (112,500 acres) 
and a near-doubling of last year's crop.

"It's going to be massive," said one British drugs official. "My 
guess is it's going to be the biggest ever." UN, American and Afghan 
officials agreed.

"It could be over 50,000 hectares, or over 50% of the total [Aghan] 
crop," said General Muhammad Daud, the deputy interior minister for 
counter-narcotics. Helmand's bumper harvest highlights the dramatic 
failure of western counter-narcotics efforts that have cost at least 
$2bn (about UKP1.09bn) since 2001. It could undo progress made last 
year, when poppy cultivation dropped 21% after President Hamid 
Karzai's call for a "jihad" on drugs. And it spells particularly bad 
news for Britain, which is leading the anti-narcotics campaign and 
has deployed 3,300 soldiers to the large and lawless province.

As Afghanistan accounts for almost 90% of the world's heroin supply, 
that would mean Helmand supplies about one-third. Drug experts say 
the province is as central to Afghanistan's illegal economy as 
California is to America's legal one.

"If you took Helmand out of the picture, Afghanistan would fall from 
the world's top poppy grower to second or third place," said one US 
official. British and American officials cannot resort to the tactics 
of the Taliban, which slashed poppy cultivation to 8,000 hectares in 
2001 by threatening to shoot farmers. But western efforts using less 
violent methods, such as encouraging farmers to grow legal crops, 
have proved fruitless.

The smuggling kingpins who control the UKP1.5bn trade have become 
rich, powerful and apparently untouchable. Although several hundred 
low-level couriers have been arrested, not one "big fish" has been 
tried in Afghanistan - a critical failing according to analysts. 
"Until Karzai arrests and jails one big dealer, people will not 
believe the central government is behind this drive," said a former 
American anti-narcotics contractor.

The most damaging allegations swirl around the minister charged with 
counter-narcotics, Gen Daud. Several western officials allege Gen 
Daud, a former Tajik warlord, has historical and family links to 
smuggling. Gen Daud denies the allegations as "politicking" and 
blames the British embassy for trying to slur his reputation.

"It is very shameful for a big country with such a good reputation to 
make allegations like this. They should first investigate, and if 
they have any proof bring it forward," he said at his office.

As proof of his modest wealth, Gen Daud said the government paid his 
rent, his children walked to school and one of his brothers worked as 
a taxi driver in Saudi Arabia.

Sour relations with the drugs minister are not the only problem 
facing British officials in tackling this year's bumper crop. 
American congressmen are ratcheting up pressure to start poppy 
eradication using pesticide-spraying planes, a controversial tactic. 
Aerial spraying has been used extensively against coca plantations in 
Colombia but is trenchantly opposed by British and Afghans officials, 
who say it would be disastrous in Afghanistan. "It could drive 
farmers into the hands of the insurgents," said one.

But an American official predicted that without a dramatic drop in 
next year's crop, spraying could lead to a UK-US rift by 2008. 
"Spraying will continue to be a cloud on the horizon and it will get 
darker," he said.

In Helmand British commanders insists the 3,300 soldiers will avoid 
tackling drugs in favour of providing security and development funds. 
"We have to put the things in place that will make it no longer 
necessary to grow poppy," said a senior officer.

But drug experts say it will be impossible to avoid the drugs war. 
Britain's main enemy, the Taliban, has developed close links to drug 
smugglers, sometimes providing them with weapons and vehicles. On 
Sunday a British soldier, named as Captain Jim Philippson, became the 
first combat fatality in Helmand after a battle with suspected Taliban forces.
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman