Pubdate: Sat, 10 Nov 2007 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2007 Southam Inc. Contact: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Author: Tom Blackwell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) STATE OF THE AFGHAN NATION Opium With its economy in shambles, Afghanistan ranks near the bottom on almost every international indicator of human and economic development. In one sector, though, it leads the world, setting records year after year. Unfortunately, that sector is the heroin trade. Afghanistan produces more than 90% of the world's opium. As well as supplying addicts around the globe--causing an estimated 100,000 deaths a year -- the industry has fuelled corruption and instability at home, and bankrolled the Taliban insurgency. "Opium production has reached a frightening new level, twice the amount produced just two years ago," the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) noted recently in its latest report on the situation. That poppy boom brought $4-billion to Afghanistan this year, more than half the country's legitimate GDP. The consequences are far-reaching. A "metastases" of dirty money funds everything from capital investment to expensive foreign imports, bribes of civil servants and even weddings and funerals, the report notes. "The government's benign tolerance of corruption is undermining the future: no country has ever built prosperity on crime." The trade also has a symbiotic relationship with the Taliban. For keeping poppy fields safe from authorities, and protecting drug labs and smuggling convoys, the insurgents earn about $10-million annually, by one estimate. And yet, there are positive developments that hint at a solution. Seven provinces moved out of opium production this year, bringing the poppy-free total to 13 provinces, and leaving production concentrated mostly in the more lawless south. The possible solutions run the gamut. The European Union has endorsed a proposal to set up an industry to produce legal opiates for the medical market. American officials have been pushing chemical spraying of poppy fields, though critics warn of a backlash among Afghans. The UNODC urges a multi-pronged approach: increasing the "abysmally low" financial support paid farmers to grow other crops, using NATO military might to curb the flow of precursor chemicals in and opium or heroin out of Afghanistan, and crop eradication that is done fairly. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek