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  • Afghanistan: Narco-Cartels A Growing Threat, UN Drug Agency Warns

    AFGHANISTAN: NARCO-CARTELS A GROWING THREAT, UN DRUG AGENCY WARNS
    Aunohita Mojumdar

    Eurasia Insight
    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insightb/ar ticles/eav090209.shtml
    9/02/09

    A report released September 2 by the United Nations Office on Drugs
    and Crime has good news and bad news about narcotics cultivation and
    trafficking in Afghanistan. The good news is that 800,000 Afghan
    farmers have stopped cultivating poppies; the bad is that those
    who continue to grow illicit crops are becoming more efficient, and
    traders are forging stronger ties with criminal and insurgent groups,
    as well as corrupt officials.

    The UNODC report, titled Afghan Opium Survey 2009, documents a decline
    in opium cultivation in Afghanistan for the second consecutive year,
    dropping by as much 22 percent since 2008. Prices for opiates are also
    at a 10-year low. But, signaling improved efficiency, the production
    of narcotics from poppy plants was down only 10 percent.

    Good news is deeply entangled with the bad. Helmand, a province with
    a notorious reputation for the drug trade, showed a one-third decrease
    in areas used for poppy cultivation. Nevertheless, the province still
    accounts for the lion's share -- 56 percent -- of poppies grown in
    Afghanistan, according to the report.

    Officials say several factors contributed to the gains made in the
    anti-drug fight, including more robust counter-narcotics operations
    by Afghan security and NATO forces, stronger provincial leadership,
    and favorable market conditions for the cultivation and sale of
    other crops.

    The UNODC declared the strategy of eradication a continuing
    "failure" noting that, despite the enormous human and economic
    cost, only 4 percent of the crop had been effectively eradicated
    with force. Speaking with the media in Kabul on September 2, UNODC
    Executive Director Antonio Maria Costa criticized the continuing
    collusion between the drug trade and corrupt government officials
    and questioned some recent actions by the Afghan government.

    "Drug lords should be brought to justice, not executed in violation
    of international law or pardoned for political expediency,"
    he said. President Hamid Karzai recently pardoned several drug
    smugglers including a relative of his election campaign manager. The
    international community had earlier criticized the Afghan government
    for executing drug smugglers, arguing that a weak criminal justice
    system lacking checks and balances made such executions suspect. Costa
    expressed concern about the pardon and release of traffickers, adding
    that corruption was "an enabling factor" and "major lubricant" to
    the drug trade.

    While welcoming the good news at a "time of pessimism about the
    situation in Afghanistan," Costa cautioned against foreseeing a trend,
    warning that stockpiling and a fluctuating opium market were also
    contributing factors to the decline. "Is it a trend or a market
    correction?" Costa asked rhetorically. "Hopefully the former, and
    certainly the latter."

    In a well-attended news conference held jointly with Minister of
    Counter Narcotics General Khodaidad Khodaidad, and UN Deputy Special
    Representative for Afghanistan Peter Galbraith, Costa warned that new
    links among insurgents and criminal groups were "spawning narco-cartels
    in Afghanistan linked to the Taliban."

    The linkage between poppy cultivation and insurgency is growing. "Like
    never before, the fates of counter-narcotics and counter insurgency
    are inextricably linked," Costa added.

    Costa also expressed concern about opium stockpiling. He estimated
    that 10,000 tons had accumulated, and described this burgeoning
    stockpile as a "ticking-bomb" that needed to be uncovered and defused.

    Speaking to EurasiaNet after the news conference, Costa emphasized
    the importance of law enforcement, good governance and delivery of
    aid to provinces that had performed well. "Control of territory"
    and security will be crucial to maintaining momentum in the anti-drug
    fight. Greater development assistance needs to be delivered faster,
    more efficiently and through fewer intermediaries, he said.

    The risks to cultivators and drug lords had been low until Afghan
    security forces and international forces began carrying out more
    robust operations, Costa added. "The impunity enjoyed thus far by
    the Afghan drug economy is under threat," he noted.

    The UNODC report documented that the number of poppy-free provinces
    increased from 18 last year to 20 in 2009, including Kapisa,
    Baghlan and Faryab. But Nangarhar, which was poppy free last year,
    lost that coveted status to become a poppy-producing province
    once again. Reversals also included Badghis Province, where poppy
    cultivation increased tenfold from 500 to 5000 hectares in the past
    year, according to the UNODC report. Overall, Afghanistan has 34
    provinces.

    Though many observers have become concerned that cannabis is replacing
    opium in areas that have successfully beaten back poppy growth, no
    such figures were included in the report. UNODC Country Representative
    Jean-Luc Lemahieu told EurasiaNet that such figures were expected in
    January of 2010. Satellite imaging technology used to detect cannabis
    is more exacting than that for poppy and the UNODC only recently
    acquired the funding to undertake such a study. Lemahieu emphasized
    that the linkages between cannabis production and insurgency were
    not as strong as with opium.

    Costa called for a regional approach to Afghanistan's drug problem,
    emphasizing the need to widen antinarcotics programs to Iran and
    the Central Asian states. To that end, the UNODC has brokered a
    Trilateral Initiative involving Afghanistan, Iran and Pakistan to
    share counter-narcotics intelligence and run joint operations. It
    has also created a Central Asia Intelligence Centre, headquartered
    in Almaty, Kazakhstan.

    "Controlling drugs in Afghanistan will not solve all of the country's
    problems, but the country's problems can not be solved without
    controlling drugs," Costa concluded.

    Editor's Note: Aunohita Mojumdar is an Indian freelance journalist
    based in Kabul. She has reported on the South Asian region for the
    past 19 years.
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