Pubdate: Fri, 23 Feb 2007 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456 Author: Bruce Campion-Smith, Ottawa Bureau Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?232 (Chronic Pain) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) SELL AFGHAN POPPIES FOR MEDICINE: DION Wants Ottawa To Back Pilot Project To Turn Opium Into Medicinal Painkillers OTTAWA-Canada should back a pilot project to market Afghanistan's opium production - blamed for fuelling a deadly insurgency - as legal medicinal painkillers, Liberal Leader Stephane Dion says. In a major foreign policy speech yesterday, Dion called for a new strategy for the Afghan mission to put a greater focus on diplomacy and development. And one key plank is a plan to cope with the country's poppy crop, which has become a mainstay of the economy. "If we do not start to think creatively about the problem of the drug economy, the situation will never get better," Dion said in a text of his Montreal speech. Dion said Canada should help fund a project proposed by the Senlis Council, an international security and development policy think-tank, to license poppy crops for use as codeine and morphine in the developing world. "Such a licensed cultivation would ... offer farmers a real and profitable alternative to the heroin trade," he said. Dion, who also urged a crackdown on illegal processing labs, later conceded the drug strategy is not a sure bet. "I know it is very risky what they are proposing. I am not naive. But what is not risky in Afghanistan? We need to try this risk and see the result," Dion said in an interview after his noon-hour speech. During an Ottawa visit last September, Afghan President Hamid Karzai warned that the "menace" of narcotics was as serious a threat as terrorism and could undermine the country's economic progress. "If we do not destroy poppies in Afghanistan, poppies will destroy us," Karzai said. Current efforts to eradicate the poppy crop have been controversial since destitute farmers are often left with no income to support their families. In addition to tackling the drug trade, Dion said Canada must do more to ensure Afghans get necessary vaccinations. And he said the country needs help to rebuild irrigation networks destroyed in decades of violence. In his speech, Dion said a Liberal government would withdraw Canada's 2,500 troops from Kandahar in 2009, but left the door open for soldiers to go elsewhere in the country. "I will say unequivocally that a Liberal government led by me will not extend Canada's combat mission in Kandahar beyond February 2009," Dion said. "We need a new government that will be able to say very clearly 'Yes, we end the mission in 2009 .. help us in the meantime and we need a country to replace us because we are serious,'" he said in the interview. The federal Conservatives have yet to say what Canada's role might be in Afghanistan after the current military commitment ends in February 2009. Noting that just 20 per cent of Canada's aid funding is being spent in Kandahar, Dion said a Liberal government would push for a "real effort to win the hearts and minds of Afghans. "It is very difficult to keep the confidence of the population if they don't identify the Canadian forces with improvement for the quality of life," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman