Pubdate: Sat, 08 Jul 2006 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Laura Payton Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) IN THE FIELDS OF THE WARLORDS U.S. Efforts, Supported By Canada, To Eradicate Afghanistan's Poppy Production Are Turning Farmers Against The Coalition. As A Result, According To One European Think-Tank, Canadian Soldiers' Lives Are At Greater Risk. Each morning by 4 a.m., Attah Mohammad is working his field, farming wheat or onions, depending on the season. At 10 a.m., he rests for an hour and a half, then returns to his two-acre farm for another 10 or 11 hours. Even after all those back-breaking hours, Mr. Mohammad, who is in his mid-fifties, can't be sure there'll be enough food to feed his wife or 11 children. Mr. Mohammad's wheat and onions bring him about 22 cents a kilogram. But where he lives, in Panshar, Afghanistan, the cash crop is poppies. The opium derived from poppies and destined for the illicit drug trade, is worth about $155 per kilogram to the farmers. "The people who cultivate poppies, their lives are much better than mine," says Mr. Mohammad through a translator. "They have their own food, they eat three meals in the day and they have everything that I'm not having. If I find something for lunch, then I'm not finding for dinner." Mr. Mohammad isn't the only one suffering from the U.S. government's efforts to eradicate poppy production in Afghanistan. According to one European think-tank, Canadian soldiers are among those endangered by the ongoing war between farmers trying to eke out a living, powerful drug warlords suspected of funding a violent insurgency, and a government trying to stabilize its country. The Senlis Council, a Paris-based defence policy research group, released a contentious report last week detailing how "Canadian troops and Afghan civilians are paying with their lives for Canada's adherence to the U.S. government's failing military and counter-narcotics policies in Kandahar," and noting that "following U.S. policies is turning Kandahar into a suicide mission for Canada." While the Canadian government officially supports the eradication, the Canadian Forces aren't involved in the process. But they're having a hard time convincing the locals of that, which, the council says, is part of the problem. The solution, says the report, is to help Afghanistan set up a legal drug trade, growing opium poppies and converting them into pain relievers. On its surface, the plan makes some sense: the report, a feasibility study on opium licensing in Afghanistan, says that there is a shortage of legal opiates in the developing world -- namely, codeine and morphine, which are used for pain control both after surgery and with seriously ill patients. The Senlis Council wants Afghanistan to set up processing facilities so that the crops grown there can be turned into much-needed medicine, meaning more jobs for an economy that currently relies on the illegal opiate trade for more than half of its income. Most of all, allowing farmers to continue to grow poppies means that they will earn more than they would with substitution crops such as wheat. The council's researchers spent months interviewing farmers, security officials and other locals, and concluded that eradicating poppy fields means financial ruin for farmers. As a result, as coalition soldiers protect the Afghan government contractors tearing up the poppy fields, the local population turns to the insurgency for help. "(The) Taliban used to be seen as oppressors, and they are now seen more and more as protectors," says Emmanuel Reinert, the council's executive director. "Foreign troops used to be seen as liberators, and now they're seen more and more as invaders. "The level of hostility to foreign troops is extremely high." The council, which has an office in Kabul, says that its proposal would allow the farmers a legitimate source of income and eliminate some of the world's supply of illegal heroin. Estimates suggest 4,000 tonnes of opium worth $3.4 billion were smuggled out of Afghanistan last year alone. The council's report has drawn its share of critics, including Canada's Chief of Defence Staff, Gen. Rick Hillier, who suggested the Senlis Council lacked the credibility to draw such conclusions. "One of the thing that I found when I was the commander on international operations was the most dangerous thing of all was the individual who visited the theatre of operations for 48 hours and then left as instant experts with the solution to everything, which invariably was wrong," he said. "We don't have everything right in Afghanistan. We know that. Each day we change the way we do business just a little bit, and we'll continue to do that until the day we come home from that mission." The Vienna-based International Narcotics Control Board, an independent body that implements the United Nations' drug-control conventions, was also critical of the report, noting that the council's recommendations won't work until the security situation in Afghanistan changes. "You take one step out of Kabul and it's like the Wild West," says Saul Takahashi, a drug control officer with the INCB. "(The plan is) just not feasible and it won't be feasible in the near future." The council disagrees, though, explaining that the local community leaders, if they come on-side, have enough sway to ensure security. "It's not total anarchy in the countryside," says Mr. Reinert. "It's not the order we want, but in the rural communities, there is very strong social order." Mr. Reinert adds that the need for legal opiates in the developing world is growing, and that a system should be in place to ensure they get there. But the idea of selling legal drugs to Third World countries leads critics to point out another potential problem: whether those who need the painkillers could afford them. "Unless you were able to guarantee (farmers) were going to receive .. a price close to what they already get, then obviously it's all going to fall flat on its face," says Ross Coomber, an academic at the University of Plymouth in England who studies illegal drug markets and substitution policies. Peter Reuter, director of the University of Maryland's Center on the Economics of Crime and Justice Policy, adds that there is too much opportunity for farmers to double dip. "The Afghan farmers can plant lots more opium," he said. "They might well produce for the licit market, (but) why would that reduce the amount they sold into the illicit market?" With Afghanistan supplying the world with 4,000 tonnes of opium a year -- enough to refine about 400 tonnes of morphine -- it alone produces enough opium to more than satisfy worldwide demand for opiate-based pain relievers. Mr. Takahashi believes that the excess would end up diverted to the illicit market. Plus, he says, even countries such as India, which is licensed for legal production, end up with some of their product diverted to the black market. "That's in a country where they put in a lot of effort and a lot of resources to make sure that this is controlled in an adequate manner," he says. "In Afghanistan, it's just not going to happen for a long while." Still, the Senlis Council wants the chance to experiment with pilot programs. "Right now, 100 per cent of the crop is diverted into the heroin market. Even if it's not perfect, it can only be better," says Mr. Reinert. Moreover, he adds, letting the farmers maintain their crops will improve the security situation, as local communities start to trust the coalition forces and stop supporting the insurgency. "It's a way to break the vicious circle, to bring the problem to a more manageable level. If you say you cannot start because Afghanistan is not secure, it will never be secure." Mr. Mohammad, the farmer who says he won't be able to feed his family without growing opium poppies, would like to see the international community support the Senlis Council's proposal. "I cannot tell you about the politics," he says. "But this is going to support the Afghan economy and farmers and also bring peace and stability." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman