Pubdate: Tue, 16 Oct 2007 Source: Bangkok Post (Thailand) Copyright: The Post Publishing Public Co., Ltd. 2007 Contact: http://www.bangkokpost.co.th/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/39 YOUTH TURNING TO POPPY CROPS The twin revelations last week that opium growing has increased again, not only in Burma but in Thailand, must provide new impetus to government plans to fight this scourge. New Deputy Prime Minister Sonthi Boonyaratkalin grabbed the issue instantly, claiming that it is necessary to have martial law to fight the drug problem. As questionable as that is, it is clear that authorities have to step up and address this serious security problem. According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, poppy cultivation in the Golden Triangle has grown nearly 50% in just a year. The lion's share is in the Shan State of Burma, but far too much -- 1,400 rai -- is in Thailand, mostly in Chiang Mai, where opium acreage has doubled in just two years. Authorities blame this on teenage entrepreneurs, attracted by the obscene profit possibilities. Prime Minister Surayud Chulanont, during his regular Saturday TV appearance, said he believed the government has enough time in office to do something about the problem of illegal drugs. This seems a rather backhanded way to approach such a serious threat. Any government has enough time to contribute in many ways to the battle against the drug scourge. What the country wanted to hear from Gen Surayud was his plans about fighting illegal drugs during the next three months. Instead, he issued a platitude about how he was sure his newest deputy would come up with some anti-drug plans. That lack of dynamic leadership threw the ball at Gen Sonthi. The country is undoubtedly hoping he can rise to the occasion. He tried to talk a good introduction last week, but the nation is highly sceptical about his justification for keeping martial law in so many provinces. If drug trafficking and abuse is steadily rising, that means Gen Sonthi's Council for National Security has ignored or done a poor job of solving the problem. Never before in Thai history have drug traffickers created such a threat to the nation that the only answer was martial law. The keys to attacking the illegal drug problems have not changed. In the first place, firm police pressure is required to gather and act on information about where and when drugs are being smuggled, with rapid and strong suppression to apprehend the traffickers. Community and religious leaders need and deserve the utmost backing to encourage and conduct programmes designed to discourage young people from drug peddling and use through education and alternative activities. At the top, the government must provide the necessary tools to organisations such as the Anti-Money Laundering Organisation so they can pursue and attack drug dealers where it hurts the most -- in their purses and pocketbooks. Gen Surayud must recognise that one of the keys to any successful anti-drugs campaign is to use what his Office of Narcotics Control Board has called the holistic approach. Drug abusers, for example, are victims of the trade, and deserve help rather than incarceration in over-filled prisons. Going after big-time drug dealers from the top down will bring far more success in shutting the drugs trade than targetting small-time sellers. The former government's campaign to wipe out street peddling has had limited success exactly because it left the top traffickers free to reorganise their gangs, and we are suffering the results of that murderous ''war on drugs'' today. The teenagers and other short-sighted opium cultivators in the North can be best dealt with by using past models of crop replacement. Opium may be profitable, but other activities including farm crops can gain a higher price, with no threat of prison time. Authorities must act against opium growers now, rooting up their crops if necessary. Last week's events in the South showed the enormous security implications of drug dealing. Poppy cultivation now is merely an open invitation for organised crime to try to renew and dig its roots deeper in the North. The public will not easily forgive a government that fails to meet its responsibility to fight this menace. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart