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  • Karabakh Rejects Drug Claims

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting
    March 18 2004

    Karabakh Rejects Drug Claims

    Allegation made to the UN that Nagorny Karabakh is used as narcotics
    route is angrily denied by the Armenians.

    By Ashot Beglarian in Stepanakert (CRS No. 223, 18-Mar-04)

    The Armenian authorities in Nagorny Karabakh have invited
    international officials to come and monitor the territories they
    control, after allegations from Azerbaijan that the region is a
    transit corridor for the drugs trade.

    The issue cropped up this week at a Vienna meeting of the United
    Nations Commission on Narcotic Drugs. One item on the agenda proposed
    that, `The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, in coordination
    with the appropriate organs of the United Nations system, Interpol
    and other international organisations should be invited to study the
    drugs situation in the territories outside the control of the
    legitimate governments of the countries in the region (Afghanistan,
    Iraq and the Nagorny Karabakh region of Azerbaijan).'

    In response, Masis Mailian, deputy foreign minister of the
    unrecognised republic of Nagorny Karabakh told IWPR that his
    government was happy to welcome an independent international
    monitoring group to visit all of the territory it controlled - both
    Karabakh itself and the Armenian-occupied territories around it.

    `The group must include truly independent international experts who
    would conduct an objective investigation,' said Mailian.

    Azerbaijan claims that Nagorny Karabakh and the surrounding lands
    under Armenian control have become a transit point for narcotics on
    the `southern route' of the heroin trade, that originates in
    Afghanistan and passes through Iran on its way to Europe. It says the
    long stretch of border along the Araxes river between Iran and the
    empty lands controlled by the Karabakh Armenians is entirely
    unmonitored, and is therefore a good entry point for drug
    traffickers.

    Ali Hassanov, chairman of Azerbaijan's State Commission to Combat
    Drug Abuse and Illegal Trafficking, said the main problem his
    commission faced was `the uncontrolled territories occupied by
    Armenia, where narcotics are cultivated, and through which they are
    trafficked'.

    However, Karabakh Armenian official Mailian challenged anyone to
    provide evidence of this, noting that the US State Department's
    International Narcotics Control Strategy Report published on March 1
    this year failed even to mention Nagorny Karabakh, while stating that
    Azerbaijan is one of the main transit routes for international
    trafficking.

    IWPR also asked the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, UNODC. in Vienna
    whether it had evidence of Karabakh being used as a transit point.
    The response was that UNODC had no available evidence, although a
    change of personnel in its Tehran office meant it was unable to check
    fully with its sources in Iran.

    The Karabakh Armenian authorities say that, on the contrary, they
    have been waging a persistent campaign against the cultivation of
    opium poppies and wild cannabis that used to grow in Karabakh.

    Locals now admit that the territory suffered from a drug problem
    during the war of 1991-94, but they say that this has now been
    brought under control.

    `The problem of cultivating narcotic plants was particularly
    difficult during the war, in 1992-1993,' said one villager. `You
    should have seen the care - that should have been put to better use -
    with which some people grew poppies. There's nothing surprising about
    that - the plant is easier and cheaper to grow, and profits from
    selling it are much higher, than many other plants, vegetables and
    fruits.' He explained that drugs were sometimes bartered for flour,
    sugar and other items that were then in short supply

    When fighting was still going on in 1993, the police force launched
    their first operation Mak (Poppy), which has been repeated every year
    since then in Karabakh and the surrounding territories. On average up
    to five tons of wild cannabis and up to 15 kilos of unprocessed opium
    poppies are found and destroyed each year.

    `Two years running, in 1993 and 1994, I was involved in Mak
    operations as part of various internal affairs ministry groups,'
    Albert Voskanian, a retired lieutenant colonel in the police, told
    IWPR. `We searched through all the regions, all the fields and garden
    plots where opium poppy could possibly be grown. We began the
    operation at a time when the poppies were almost ready, but it was
    still too early to harvest. We uprooted the plants that we found,
    registered them in a report and took them away to burn.

    `Many owners were reluctant to give up the harvest voluntarily, and
    there were cases of resistance. The operation was so important that
    some troops were called in from the front to assist.'

    Voskanian said that in the first year the owners of plantations were
    not punished, only warned. This proved to be effective - there was
    much less cannabis and poppy during the second year.

    Slavik Gasparian, another veteran of these operations, also says they
    were broadly very successful. `During the war I served as a senior
    sergeant in a unit of the Karabakh army and I knew about all the
    operations to destroy poppy and cannabis plantations. I can say just
    one thing - the joint efforts of the law enforcement forces, army and
    other agencies produced an excellent result. At least after 1995,
    people were afraid to grow even one poppy plant openly.'

    Karabakh's interior ministry says that in 1998-2003, the authorities
    uncovered 156 drug-related crimes, half of which were related to
    cultivating illegal narcotic plants and the rest to the illegal
    purchase, possession and abuse of drugs. It says that drug-related
    crimes comprise only five per cent of all offences.

    Representatives of the penal institutions of Nagorny Karabakh said
    that interior ministry doctors provide compulsory treatment for all
    drug addicts in custody.

    Sociologist David Sarkisian said that some Karabakhis experimented
    with cannabis, but there was a strong social taboo against drug
    taking as a whole in society.

    `There are no objective preconditions for the wide dissemination of
    drugs and drug abuse in Nagorny Karabakh,' Sarkisian said. `Our
    society categorically rejects drug addicts, considering them the most
    degraded members of society - worse than even the most miserable
    drunkards. Many young people try cannabis and other weed either out
    of curiosity or from a mistaken idea of self-assertion.'

    The more controversial matter of whether drugs are passing through
    Karabakh from Iran will remain disputed as long as there is no
    verdict from international agencies. The UN has so far not decided
    whether to send a delegation to the region to study the claims.

    Ashot Beglarian is a freelance journalist based in Stepanakert.
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