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Opium freedom

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   http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/uctr/20011127/cm/all_things_fall_apart_freedom_comes_to_afghanistan_1.html

http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/uctr/20011127/cm/all_things_fall_apart_freedom_comes_to_afghanistan_1.html

Tuesday November 27 09:21 PM EST

ALL THINGS FALL APART: FREEDOM COMES TO
AFGHANISTAN

By Ted Rall

TALIQAN, Afghanistan (news - web sites) -- One week after the Taliban fled this dusty provincial
capital to join their comrades defending nearby Kunduz, freedom was in the air. Eleven-year-old boys
toting rocket launchers bigger than themselves milled about the central square, playing soccer, flying
kites and shooting their AKs into the air. Women briefly lifted their burqas to take a clear look at the
workman painting over the Taliban logo on the local school.

I wandered the streets feeling more like Mick Jagger than a citizen of the nation dropping bombs on the
locals; a throng of men and boys followed me as I made my way to the market to buy Nescafe and flea
powder. Because of Ramadan the bazaar is quiet during the day, but at night the Shah Masood
restaurant springs to life. The local specialty is Afghan steak kabobs mixed with eggs (like the country
itself, they are interesting but dangerous).

In a scene straight out of the Wild West, fierce gunmen sprawl over the tables, their weaponry laying
about as they sing along to Indian movie music blasting from a loudspeaker and occasionally engage
one another in fisticuffs. It's hard to believe that just a week ago most of these men were Talibs.

"Of course we will throw away our burqas," a young woman told me at the bazaar, "but we are afraid
the Taliban will come back. If they do, they will punish anyone who removes their burqas."

There is uncertainty in the air about whether "the current government", as locals call it, will stay in
power. But it's more than that. Women as well as men dread a return to the "Mad Max"-like state of
anarchy that characterized the early '90s, when the Northern Alliance last ruled this country.

From the April 1992 deposal of President Mohammad Najibullah until 1996, when the Taliban
dragged him out of a U.N. compound and castrated, shot and hanged him, the Northern Alliance's
Islamic State of Afghanistan was less a government than a state of institutionalized chaos. The highways
were trolled by rapists and warlords, and the cities became so unsafe that few Afghans dared venture
out after dark.

During this period, Afghanistan secured its role as the world's leading supplier of heroin. The Taliban
put an end to all that, but at a terrible price -- the rule of law found its pinnacle at 3 o'clock Friday
afternoons when criminals were taken to the soccer stadium east of Kabul and subjected to
amputation, stoning and execution.

The bad old days, it seems, may be coming back. At this point, the sole expression of government
authority here is a lone traffic policeman standing at the Pakistani-style rotary in the middle of the main
intersection. By yesterday, even he had repaired to a disused ammunition dump nearby where he could
be found fast asleep, a lit cigarette dangling from his lips. Half of the male population -- the heavily
armed half -- is cruising the streets looking for people to rob. And the drug trade has made a
remarkable overnight comeback; pure opium paste is selling briskly a few blocks off the main drag.

The American bombing campaign, which continues to take a toll on Kunduz and much of Takhar
Province, has heightened the sense that there are no longer any rules.

I confronted one of the customers at the opium joint: "Isn't that illegal in Afghanistan?"

"Nothing is illegal in Afghanistan," he replied. "You can do whatever you want and no one cares."

"That's not always true," I suggested.

"The Taliban would have cared," he responded, grinding the paste into fine dust and sprinkling it into a
cigarette. "But you Americans have gotten rid of them, and now we are free."

Certainly the Taliban's purist vision of Islam has taken a beating. Though people are faithfully fasting
during Ramadan, nary a head turns in response to the mullahs' call to prayer. Alcoholic beverages have
become the hottest consumer item in town.

"What? You didn't bring wine?" my guide and "fixer" asked me last night, as he geared up for a night of
opium-induced haze.

"All the western journalists bring wine from Tajikistan," he scolded. Along with the collapse of legality
and religiosity has come a wholesale plunge into the kind of societal cynicism that could mean real
trouble if and when the new (and old) Northern Alliance gets its act together.

"In this country it's hard to tell the difference between life and death," the wine aficionado told me
between bites of laghman noodles. "So we might as well live a little between all the dying."


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

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