News and Document archive source
copyrighted material disclaimer at bottom of page

NewsMinewar-on-terrorafghanistanopium — Viewing Item


Afghistan opium 2007 reaches record levels { March 5 2007 }

Original Source Link: (May no longer be active)
   http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/world/20070305-0633-afghan-drugs.html

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/world/20070305-0633-afghan-drugs.html

U.N. says Afghan poppy cultivation could rise after last year's record

By Jason Straziuso
ASSOCIATED PRESS

6:33 a.m. March 5, 2007

KABUL, Afghanistan – Afghanistan's 2007 opium poppy cultivation could expand again after last year's record crop, the U.N. drug agency said Monday, underlining the weakness of an internationally backed drive against the country's booming narcotics trade.

The Office on Drugs and Crime predicted an increase in a string of provinces, including southern Helmand – Afghanistan's largest poppy-growing region and an area wracked by a growing number of Taliban attacks.

The office said in a report that a recent U.N. survey found increasing evidence that the drug trade flourished in regions with poor security.

“This winter survey suggests that opium cultivation in Afghanistan in 2007 may not be lower than the record harvest,” last year, UNODC Executive Director Antonio Maria Costa wrote in the report's preface.

Last year, opium cultivation rose an alarming 59 percent, deepening fears that Afghanistan is rapidly becoming a narco-state. Officials say Taliban militants protect southern farmers and tap drug profits to fuel their insurgency.

The U.N. said poppy cultivation occurred in 100 percent of villages it visited in Helmand province; 93 percent of villages were growing opium poppies in neighboring Kandahar, the Taliban's former stronghold. The U.N. report did not detail how many villages were visited.

It also predicted a sharp increase in cultivation in Nangarhar – touted in recent years as an example of the success of efforts to persuade farmers to grow licit crops – as well as in Kunar and Uruzgan provinces.

On the other hand, the U.N. saw a decrease in cultivation in seven mostly northern provinces, and said there was an indication of a split in attitudes between the north and south.

“There is evidence that Afghanistan's opium economy is becoming segmented, with farmers' attitudes, supply conditions and price trends moving in opposite directions in the north and the south,” Maria Costa said.

President Hamid Karzai has vowed to rid Afghanistan of opium. International donors are directing hundreds of millions of dollars in development aid to rural areas to make it profitable for farmers to grow wheat, or plant orchards. Eradication teams are supposed to destroy opium in the fields before harvest.

However, critics say corrupt Afghan authorities and security forces are themselves heavily involved in the trade and are unlikely to mount a serious crackdown, while Karzai is wary of a rural backlash against his already weak government.

The U.N. report also found what it called a “new and disturbing trend” in Afghanistan's drug business – an increase in marijuana cultivation.

“The last thing we need is for Afghanistan to switch from one drug to another or – worse – to become a world leader in cannabis as well as opium production,” Maria Costa said.

Afghan drug production already accounts for more than 90 percent of global supply of opium, the raw material for heroin.



Afghan drug trade
Afghan heroin is flooding to the united states { January 1 2007 }
Afghan military tied to drug trade { September 4 2003 }
Afghan opium 2005 threat to world stability
Afghan poppies sprout again { November 10 2003 }
Afghan poppy profits going to taliban { April 2007 }
Afghanistan soaring drug trade hits home { March 13 2008 }
Afghistan opium 2007 reaches record levels { March 5 2007 }
Britain losing afghan opium war
Bumper year for afghan poppies { July 24 2003 }
Fatal clash with tribes poppies { May 2 2003 }
General sees drugs link with alqaeda
Karzai blames west for afghan poppies { May 23 2005 }
Massive post war
Officials say poppies undermine democracy { April 2 2004 }
Opium crop prices soar
Opium dealers blamed for attack on afghan vp
Opium freedom
Opium funding 40perc of taliban { October 18 2007 }
Opium harvest record level in afghanistan { September 3 2006 }
Opium msnbc
Poppies poised comback { November 23 2001 }
Poppy farms rebound { November 23 2001 }
Poppy planting
Terror link to booming afghan drugs trade { April 3 2004 }
Un warns opium production spreading like cancer { October 30 2003 }
US arrests afghan heroin baron bashir noorzai { April 25 2005 }
Us soldiers becoming drug addicts
US soldiers in afghanistan using heroin

Files Listed: 29



Correction/submissions

CIA FOIA Archive

National Security
Archives
Support one-state solution for Israel and Palestine Tea Party bumper stickers JFK for Dummies, The Assassination made simple