Pubdate: Sat, 31 July 1999 Source: Daily Telegraph (Australia) Copyright: News Limited 1999 Contact: http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/ Author: Ahmed Rashid, in Kabul and Agencies DRUGS AND JEWELS HELP PAY FOR WAR WAR has been such a constant companion for the residents of Kabul, the Afghan capital, that word of another major offensive brings little more than shrugs. "Even when a rocket hits a civilian area, people disperse for a few minutes, then return to count bodies and remove the wounded. Life is back to normal within minutes," said Gull Mohammad, a jewellery maker. Like most businessmen in the capital, he has little to do these days but sit in his shop as people pass by without stopping. Few have money to spare on anything other than the bare essentials. Meanwhile, the sound of guns booming north of Kabul and Taliban fighter planes striking opposition positions send residents of nearby villages fleeing for safety. The Taliban launched an all-out offensive on Wednesday to try to extend its grip on the remaining 20 per cent of the country not under its control. The war continues because it is fuelled by outside powers and a criminalised economy of drug trafficking and smuggling that funds both the Taliban and the Northern Alliance, led by Ahmed Shah Masood. In the Helmand valley, in southern Afghanistan, poppy fields producing raw opium, which is refined into heroin, stretch as far as the horizon. The Taliban encourages farmers to import fertiliser from Pakistan and rebuild irrigation networks to treble yields. The United Nations Drugs Control Programme says Afghanistan produced 2,100 tonnes of opium in 1998, 96 per cent of it grown in Taliban-controlled areas. Heroin is a major source of income for all the warlords. Farmers pay a 10 per cent Islamic tax on their crops to local commanders, but that is collected only intermittently. The Taliban imposes a 20 per cent wealth tax, or zakat, on dealers and transporters, which goes straight into the Taliban war chest. The Northern Alliance, which controls only the north-eastern corner of the country, imposes a similar tax on opium shipments crossing into Uzbekistan and Tajikistan. It also taxes exports of emeralds and lapis lazuli gemstones mined in the north. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D