Pubdate: Fri, 27 Jun 2008 Source: Times of India, The (India) Copyright: Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. 2008 Contact: http://www.timesofindia.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/453 Referenced: 2008 World Drug Report http://drugsense.org/url/XHmBQzUv Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/World+Drug+Report THRIVING OPIUM TRADE NEXT DOOR BAD NEWS FOR INDIA NEW DELHI: India's neighbourhood is increasingly becoming a haven for opium production with both Afghanistan and Myanmar experiencing a big spike in the drug crop that funds not only crime syndicates but also Islamic terror tanzims operating from safe havens in Pakistan's wild north-west. The world drug report 2008, released by the UN office on drugs and crime, identifies trends that ought to make Indian agencies sit up and take note. Net opium cultivation in terms of percentage of agricultural land rose by 17% in Afghanistan from 2006 to 2007 and with regard to hectares, the increase was from 165,000 to 193,000. The report notes that 82% of global cultivation of opium was now located in Afghanistan and that more than half a million families were engaged in farming the deadly crop. Not just that, the yield per hectare had "improved, up by 15% from 37 kg/ha to 42.5 kg/ha". The potential opium production in 2007 in Afghanistan was as high as 8,200 tonnes. The opium trade was not only illegal, it was seriously sapping the energies of the Afghan state as it was funding the Taliban who are making a determined effort to re-establish their dominion over parts of the country. The report's findings serve to deepen concern over the Taliban-Al Qaida network becoming more entrenched as the "farm gate" value of opium production was as high as 11% of Afghanistan's GDP in 2006 and next year was 13%. The export value of opiates to neighbouring countries was a staggering $3.1 billion in 2006 and touched $4 billion in 2007. What will worry law enforcement agencies is that the number of persons involved in opium cultivation was 3.3 million in 2007. Once the illegal trade grows local roots, wrenching it out is all the more difficult. Taliban have shrewdly exploited the lack of options in Afghanistan's countryside to lure locals to the trade. Annual incomes of $1,965 seem princely to families engaged in opium cultivation while Afghanistan's per capita GDP is $310. Indicative gross income from wheat per hectare is $530 compared to $4,600 for opium. It is perhaps hardly a coincidence that cultivation has increased in the south and west along borders with Pakistan. The double-faced policies that Pakistan has followed with regard to Taliban - sometimes fighting the militants and then trying to buy peace - only benefitted drug growers. The situation in Myanmar is also deeply worrying, with cultivation growing by 29% from 2006 to 2007. Though on a smaller scale than Afghanistan, the implications for India are no less troublesome. The drug trade is again linked to militant groups operating in the north-east. Though China is understood to have made efforts to get the generals ruling Myanmar to crack down on opium with the aid of Chinese satellites, the results appear to be mixed, with eradication falling. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake