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Poppy planting

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   http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/ap/20011124/wl/attacks_poppy_planting_2.html

http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/ap/20011124/wl/attacks_poppy_planting_2.html

Saturday November 24 1:05 PM ET

Afghan Farmers Resume Poppy Planting

By CHRIS TOMLINSON, Associated Press Writer

SORKHUD, Afghanistan (AP) - Gul Haidar smiled as he sifted some seeds
through his fingers, happy he had planted the one crop that should ensure
his family's welfare next year - opium poppies.

In pencil-thin, spiraling furrows dug with a homemade plow pulled by oxen,
Haidar has sown the tiny, pale specks that will yield flowers in four months.
When the petals fall, buyers will come for the seed pods and its opium
resin.

The Pashto-speaking farmer expects to triple what he had made from the
winter wheat he had planted the last three seasons.

With the Taliban no longer around to enforce a three-year ban on
poppy-growing, hundreds of farmers near the eastern city of Jalalabad -
their appetite for profit sharpened by years of drought and hardship - have
resumed planting what they call ``narcotic.''

``We don't have much water, so with narcotic we make more money to
offset the problem of the drought,'' Haidar said. ``If you water twice a year,
narcotic will do very well, but with wheat, you have to water nine times.''

Miles of flat fields surround Jalalabad, with barren desert mountains visible
in the distance. Hundreds of miles of irrigation canals funnel runoff from
mountain springs and creeks onto the fields, but after three years without
rain, water is precious.

The 75-year-old Haidar, who lives in a mud house, has rented his 750
acres from a wealthy Afghan for the past half-century.

Before the Taliban ban, he almost exclusively grew poppies. During the past
three years, he switched to wheat rather than risk imprisonment. But Haidar
had stashed a bag of poppy seeds - and brought them out when the Taliban
fled Jalalabad this month, in time for planting season.

Now he has sown 250 acres of poppies, which he said will yield 650
pounds of opium.

``It will be just enough to live,'' Haidar said. ``I have a family of 10, so I
work just to live, eat and for clothes.''

Afghanistan was once the world's largest opium producer, enough to supply
75 percent of the world's heroin, according to the U.N. Drug Control
Program.

Farmers produced 3,611 tons from the 1999 planting. But after a ruthless
Taliban crackdown, the crop in 2000 dropped to 204 tons, the agency said
in July.

Most of the opium is exported and is rarely used locally.

Mujahed, a 42-year-old farmer who uses only one name, said buyers give
him an advance so that he can buy fertilizer and survive until the crop comes
in. They return during the annual harvest to buy his seed pods and take the
opium to Pakistan, where, he says, ``they make the stuff that is very bad.''

``But we don't know about the advantages or disadvantages for other
people,'' Mujahed said. ``I don't know what they do with it. ... For me,
there are a lot of advantages over wheat.''

The U.N. drug program spent years working with the Taliban and aid
agencies to discourage poppy growing and encourage wheat production.
But farmers outside Jalalabad said they never saw any of the aid money that
was funneled through the Taliban.

``The Westerners, when they want to help us, they should put the aid in our
hands, not give it to the leaders,'' Mujahed said, adding that he would stop
growing poppies if given an alternative.

But Kasim, a 65-year-old white bearded farmer, was less sympathetic.

``Our life is really very difficult, because we can't grow wheat and still
survive,'' he said. ``We need to grow narcotic, even if it is not fair to the rest
of the world.''


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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