Source: Associated Press; 4/22/97 Pakistan Seeks Alleged Drug Dealer By KATHY GANNON KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) Pakistan wants the United States to return an air force officer arrested in New York City on charges of heroin trafficking, news reports said today. Pakistan Air force squadron leader Farooq Ahmed Khan was arrested last week allegedly while trying to sell 4 1/2 pounds of heroin. Since then, police in Pakistan have arrested a second air force squadron leader, Qazim Bhatti, who allegedly was working with Khan to use the air force, its aircraft and relative immunity, to move heroin outside the country. Khan apparently was waiting to sell the heroin to a buyer for $160,000 outside a fastfood restaurant in New York when he was arrested, the independent Karachibased newspaper, the Dawn, reported. The United Nations and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration say Pakistan is a major distribution route for the tons of opium and heroin produced in neighboring Afghanistan. Afghanistan produces as much as 2,000 tons of opium annually, making it one of the world's largest producers. The opium is converted into heroin in the estimated hundreds of laboratories hidden away in the tribal belt that borders the two countries. From there it is shipped to markets in Europe and the United States. Several newspapers have reported the possibility of further arrests involving the use of the air force in drug trafficking. Altaf Gohar, a senior columnist, went on governmentrun television last week to demand the resignation of Pakistan's Air Force chief Abbas Khattak. In recent years, Pakistan has arrested and deported several drug barons to the United States. But most experts say the easy movement of drugs through Pakistan remains one of the biggest setbacks in the war against drugs.