Afghanistan's opium production jumps by nearly 50 percent: UN

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Pastor Dale Morgan

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Sep 2, 2006, 12:51:35 PM9/2/06
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*Perilous Times
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Saturday September 2, 10:09 PM
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Afghanistan's opium production jumps by nearly 50 percent: UN*

Afghanistan's opium production will increase by nearly 50 percent this
year to a record 6,100 tonnes after an "alarming" jump in cultivation in
the lawless south.

The area of land planted with opium -- of which Afghanistan produces
more than 90 percent of world supply -- rose 59 percent this year as
compared to last year, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
(UNODC) said Saturday.

The sharp increase in the number of acres planted would lead to a likely
harvest of 6,100 tonnes -- a 49 percent hike over the 4,100 tonnes
produced the year before.

"This year's harvest will be around 6,100 tonnes of opium -- a
staggering 92 percent of total world supply. It exceeds global
consumption by 30 percent," UNODC global executive director Antonio
Maria Costa said in Kabul.

The hike comes despite government and international efforts costing
millions of dollars to try to stop Afghanistan's trade in illegal opium,
most of which ends up in the heroin markets of Europe and central Asia.

"These are very alarming numbers. Afghanistan is increasingly hooked on
its own drug," Costa said after presenting the figures to President
Hamid Karzai.

The spike follows a 21 percent drop in cultivation last year and a just
over two percent dip in production. It was the first fall since the
Taliban government was toppled in late 2001.

An annual UNODC survey found that the lawless southern province of
Helmand planted 162 percent more opium this year than in 2005,
accounting for more than 40 percent of the total area under cultivation.

In the country as a whole, the area of land planted with opium reached a
record 165,000 hectares (407,550 acres) in 2006 compared with 104,000
last year, the UNODC statement said.

Officials have linked the drugs trade in Helmand, where the bulk of a
British deployment of 4,750 troops is based, to an increase in attacks
by Taliban insurgents and drugs traders who benefit from the insecurity.

The UNODC chief warned the southern part of Afghanistan showed "the
ominous hallmarks of incipient collapse, with large-scale drug
cultivation and trafficking, insurgency and terrorism, crime and
corruption."

The UN survey, to be published in full next month, found that only six
of Afghanistan's 34 provinces were free of opium. Cultivation fell this
year in eight provinces, mainly in the north.

"Public opinion is increasingly frustrated by the fact that opium
cultivation in Afghanistan is out of control," Costa said.

"The political, military and economic investments by coalition countries
are not having much visible impact on drug cultivation.

"As a result, Afghan opium is fuelling insurgency in western Asia,
feeding international mafias and causing a hundred thousand deaths from
overdoses every year."

He said the government must take tougher action to defeat the drugs
trade, including arresting major drug traffickers and wealthy
opium-farming landlords, and seizing their assets.

Drug-free areas should be rewarded with more substantial development
aid, and governors and police officials in charge of opium-growing
provinces should be removed and charged, he said.

"This would draw a battle line in what could otherwise be an unwinnable
war against insurgency mixed with drug trafficking," Costa said.

Improving living standards in the opium-growing area was also vital, he
said, pointing out that Afghanistan -- one of the world's poorest
countries -- had received less economic aid per person than other
post-conflict areas.

The funds that had come in were not being caught up in bureaucracy or
being misused and even stolen, Costa said.

He said Western nations also needed to curb drug abuse to try to stem
the market for opium, 10 kilograms (22 pounds) of which can be used to
make one kilogramme of heroin.

"Heroin habits in the West put huge sums of money into the pockets of
criminals and insurgents who destabilise Afghanistan and kill soldiers
and civilians alike," he said.

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